{"title":"Stationary peaks in a multivariable reaction–diffusion system: foliated snaking due to subcritical Turing instability","authors":"Edgar Knobloch;Arik Yochelis","doi":"10.1093/imamat/hxab029","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"An activator–inhibitor–substrate model of side branching used in the context of pulmonary vascular and lung development is considered on the supposition that spatially localized concentrations of the activator trigger local side branching. The model consists of four coupled reaction–diffusion equations, and its steady localized solutions therefore obey an eight-dimensional spatial dynamical system in one spatial dimension (1D). Stationary localized structures within the model are found to be associated with a subcritical Turing instability and organized within a distinct type of foliated snaking bifurcation structure. This behavior is in turn associated with the presence of an exchange point in parameter space at which the complex leading spatial eigenvalues of the uniform concentration state are overtaken by a pair of real eigenvalues; this point plays the role of a Belyakov–Devaney point in this system. The primary foliated snaking structure consists of periodic spike or peak trains with \n<tex>$N$</tex>\n identical equidistant peaks, \n<tex>$N=1,2,\\dots \\,$</tex>\n, together with cross-links consisting of nonidentical, nonequidistant peaks. The structure is complicated by a multitude of multipulse states, some of which are also computed, and spans the parameter range from the primary Turing bifurcation all the way to the fold of the \n<tex>$N=1$</tex>\n state. These states form a complex template from which localized physical structures develop in the transverse direction in 2D.","PeriodicalId":56297,"journal":{"name":"IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics","volume":"86 5","pages":"1066-1093"},"PeriodicalIF":1.4000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"7","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics","FirstCategoryId":"100","ListUrlMain":"https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9619534/","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"数学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"MATHEMATICS, APPLIED","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 7
Abstract
An activator–inhibitor–substrate model of side branching used in the context of pulmonary vascular and lung development is considered on the supposition that spatially localized concentrations of the activator trigger local side branching. The model consists of four coupled reaction–diffusion equations, and its steady localized solutions therefore obey an eight-dimensional spatial dynamical system in one spatial dimension (1D). Stationary localized structures within the model are found to be associated with a subcritical Turing instability and organized within a distinct type of foliated snaking bifurcation structure. This behavior is in turn associated with the presence of an exchange point in parameter space at which the complex leading spatial eigenvalues of the uniform concentration state are overtaken by a pair of real eigenvalues; this point plays the role of a Belyakov–Devaney point in this system. The primary foliated snaking structure consists of periodic spike or peak trains with
$N$
identical equidistant peaks,
$N=1,2,\dots \,$
, together with cross-links consisting of nonidentical, nonequidistant peaks. The structure is complicated by a multitude of multipulse states, some of which are also computed, and spans the parameter range from the primary Turing bifurcation all the way to the fold of the
$N=1$
state. These states form a complex template from which localized physical structures develop in the transverse direction in 2D.
期刊介绍:
The IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics is a direct successor of the Journal of the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications which was started in 1965. It is an interdisciplinary journal that publishes research on mathematics arising in the physical sciences and engineering as well as suitable articles in the life sciences, social sciences, and finance. Submissions should address interesting and challenging mathematical problems arising in applications. A good balance between the development of the application(s) and the analysis is expected. Papers that either use established methods to address solved problems or that present analysis in the absence of applications will not be considered.
The journal welcomes submissions in many research areas. Examples are: continuum mechanics materials science and elasticity, including boundary layer theory, combustion, complex flows and soft matter, electrohydrodynamics and magnetohydrodynamics, geophysical flows, granular flows, interfacial and free surface flows, vortex dynamics; elasticity theory; linear and nonlinear wave propagation, nonlinear optics and photonics; inverse problems; applied dynamical systems and nonlinear systems; mathematical physics; stochastic differential equations and stochastic dynamics; network science; industrial applications.