We characterize the mechanical recovery of compliant silicone gels following adhesive contact failure. We establish broad, stable adhesive contacts between rigid microspheres and soft gels, then stretch the gels to large deformations by pulling quasi-statically on the contact. Eventually, the adhesive contact begins to fail, and ultimately slides to a final contact point on the bottom of the sphere. Immediately after detachment, the gel recoils quickly with a self-similar surface profile that evolves as a power law in time, suggesting that the adhesive detachment point is singular. The singular dynamics we observe are consistent with a relaxation process driven by surface stress and slowed by viscous flow through the porous, elastic network of the gel. Our results emphasize the importance of accounting for both the liquid and solid phases of gels in understanding their mechanics, especially under extreme deformation. arXiv:1810.05329v1 [cond-mat.soft]
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In this paper, we begin by discussing different types of preference profiles related to the stable marriage problem. We then introduce the concept of soulmates, which are a man and a woman who rank each other first. Inversely, we examine hell-pairs, where a man and a woman rank each other last. We generate sequences enumerating preference profiles of different types. We also calculate sequences related to the egalitarian cost, or "quality", of a matching. In total, we introduce and discuss 30 new sequences related to the stable marriage problem and discuss 6 sequences that are already in the OEIS.
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