16 research outputs found

    Parameter domains for Turing and stationary flow-distributed waves: I. The influence of nonlinearity

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    new type of instability in coupled reaction-diffusion-advection systems is analysed in a one-dimensional domain. This instability, arising due to the combined action of flow and diffusion, creates spatially periodic stationary waves termed flow and diffusion-distributed structures (FDS). Here we show, via linear stability analysis, that FDS are predicted in a considerably wider domain and are more robust (in the parameter domain) than the classical Turing instability patterns. FDS also represent a natural extension of the recently discovered flow-distributed oscillations (FDO). Nonlinear bifurcation analysis and numerical simulations in one-dimensional spatial domains show that FDS also have much richer solution behaviour than Turing structures. In the framework presented here Turing structures can be viewed as a particular instance of FDS. We conclude that FDS should be more easily obtainable in chemical systems than Turing (and FDO) structures and that they may play a potentially important role in biological pattern formation

    Turing instabilities in general systems

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    We present necessary and sufficient conditions on the stability matrix of a general n(S2)-dimensional reaction-diffusion system which guarantee that its uniform steady state can undergo a Turing bifurcation. The necessary (kinetic) condition, requiring that the system be composed of an unstable (or activator) and a stable (or inhibitor) subsystem, and the sufficient condition of sufficiently rapid inhibitor diffusion relative to the activator subsystem are established in three theorems which form the core of our results. Given the possibility that the unstable (activator) subsystem involves several species (dimensions), we present a classification of the analytically deduced Turing bifurcations into p (1 h p h (n m 1)) different classes. For n = 3 dimensions we illustrate numerically that two types of steady Turing pattern arise in one spatial dimension in a generic reaction-diffusion system. The results confirm the validity of an earlier conjecture [12] and they also characterise the class of so-called strongly stable matrices for which only necessary conditions have been known before [23, 24]. One of the main consequences of the present work is that biological morphogens, which have so far been expected to be single chemical species [1-9], may instead be composed of two or more interacting species forming an unstable subsystem

    Travelling waves in a nonlinear degenerate diffusion model for bacterial pattern formation

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    We study a reaction diffusion model recently proposed in [5] to describe the spatiotemporal evolution of the bacterium Bacillus subtilis on agar plates containing nutrient. An interesting mathematical feature of the model, which is a coupled pair of partial differential equations, is that the bacterial density satisfies a degenerate nonlinear diffusion equation. It was shown numerically that this model can exhibit quasi-one-dimensional constant speed travelling wave solutions. We present an analytic study of the existence and uniqueness problem for constant speed travelling wave solutions. We find that such solutions exist only for speeds greater than some threshold speed giving minimum speed waves which have a sharp profile. For speeds greater than this minimum speed the waves are smooth. We also characterise the dependence of the wave profile on the decay of the front of the initial perturbation in bacterial density. An investigation of the partial differential equation problem establishes,via a global existence and uniqueness argument, that these waves are the only long time solutions supported by the problem. Numerical solutions of the partial differential equation problem are presented and they confirm the results of the analysis

    Limit cycles in the presence of convection, a travelling wave analysis

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    We consider a diffusion model with limit cycle reaction functions, in the presence of convection. We select a set of functions derived from a realistic reaction model: the Schnakenberg equations. This resultant form is unsymmetrical. We find a transformation which maps the irregular equations into model form. Next we transform the dependent variables into polar form. From here, a travelling wave analysis is performed on the radial variable. Results are complex, but we make some simple estimates. We carry out numerical experiments to test our analysis. An initial `knock' starts the propagation of pattern. The speed of the travelling wave is not quite as expected. We investigate further. The system demonstrates distinctly different behaviour to the left and the right. We explain how this phenomenon occurs by examining the underlying behaviour.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
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