Biology unlike physics

Functionality is at the core of our understanding of biological systems. In contrast, inert physical systems lack this sense of function. Accounting for biological function thus requires a new kind of physics. Our group explains biological phenomena by exploring new regimes of statistical physics, mechanics and thermodynamics. Some general questions…

  • How are functions embedded in biological matter? For instance, how do proteins find correct partners in the heterogeneous cellular environment?

  • What determines the characteristics that organisms evolve? Why some organisms evolve sensory response, whereas others evolve stochastic response?

  • What are the main constraints to biological functionality? The laws of thermodynamics, the genetic code, the finite size of the proteome?

Below are some examples of our research interests