116 research outputs found
Adiabatic stability under semi-strong interactions: The weakly damped regime
We rigorously derive multi-pulse interaction laws for the semi-strong
interactions in a family of singularly-perturbed and weakly-damped
reaction-diffusion systems in one space dimension. Most significantly, we show
the existence of a manifold of quasi-steady N-pulse solutions and identify a
"normal-hyperbolicity" condition which balances the asymptotic weakness of the
linear damping against the algebraic evolution rate of the multi-pulses. Our
main result is the adiabatic stability of the manifolds subject to this normal
hyperbolicity condition. More specifically, the spectrum of the linearization
about a fixed N-pulse configuration contains essential spectrum that is
asymptotically close to the origin as well as semi-strong eigenvalues which
move at leading order as the pulse positions evolve. We characterize the
semi-strong eigenvalues in terms of the spectrum of an explicit N by N matrix,
and rigorously bound the error between the N-pulse manifold and the evolution
of the full system, in a polynomially weighted space, so long as the
semi-strong spectrum remains strictly in the left-half complex plane, and the
essential spectrum is not too close to the origin
Travelling pulses on three spatial scales in a Klausmeier-type vegetation-autotoxicity model
Reaction-diffusion models describing interactions between vegetation and
water reveal the emergence of several types of patterns and travelling wave
solutions corresponding to structures observed in real-life. Increasing their
accuracy by also considering the ecological factor known as autotoxicity has
lead to more involved models supporting the existence of complex dynamic
patterns. In this work, we include an additional carrying capacity for the
biomass in a Klausmeier-type vegetation-water-autotoxicity model, which induces
the presence of two asymptotically small parameters: ,
representing the usual scale separation in vegetation-water models, and
, directly linked to autotoxicity. We construct three separate types of
homoclinic travelling pulse solutions based on two different scaling regimes
involving and , with and without a so-called superslow
plateau. The relative ordering of the small parameters significantly influences
the phase space geometry underlying the construction of the pulse solutions. We
complement the analysis by numerical continuation of the constructed pulse
solutions, and demonstrate their existence (and stability) by direct numerical
simulation of the full PDE model
Large amplitude radially symmetric spots and gaps in a dryland ecosystem model
We construct far-from-onset radially symmetric spot and gap solutions in a
two-component dryland ecosystem model of vegetation pattern formation on flat
terrain, using spatial dynamics and geometric singular perturbation theory. We
draw connections between the geometry of the spot and gap solutions with that
of traveling and stationary front solutions in the same model. In particular,
we demonstrate the instability of spots of large radius by deriving an
asymptotic relationship between a critical eigenvalue associated with the spot
and a coefficient which encodes the sideband instability of a nearby stationary
front. Furthermore, we demonstrate that spots are unstable to a range of
perturbations of intermediate wavelength in the angular direction, provided the
spot radius is not too small. Our results are accompanied by numerical
simulations and spectral computations
A geometric construction of traveling waves in a bioremediation.
Bioremediation is a promising technique for cleaning contaminated soil. We study an idealized bioremediation model involving a substrate (contaminant to be removed), electron acceptor (added nutrient), and microorganisms in a one-dimensional soil column. Using geometric singular perturbation theory, we construct traveling waves (TW) corresponding to motion of a biologically active zone, in which the microorganisms consume both substrate and acceptor. For certain values of the parameters, the traveling waves exist on a three-dimensional slow manifold within the five-dimensional phase space. We prove persistence of the slow manifold under perturbation by controlling the nonlinearity via a change of coordinates, and we construct the wave in the transverse intersection of appropriate stable and unstable manifolds in this slow manifold. We study how the TW depends on the half saturation constants and other parameters and investigate numerically a bifurcation in which the TW loses stability to a periodic wav
Nonlinear asymptotic stability of the semi-strong pulse dynamics in a regularized Gierer-Meinhardt model
We use renormalization group (RG) techniques to prove the nonlinear asymptotic stability for the semi-strong regime of two-pulse interactions in a regularized Gierer-Meinhardt system. In the semi-strong limit the strongly localized activator pulses interact through the weakly localized inhibitor, the interaction is not tail-tail as in the weak interaction limit, and the pulses change amplitude and even stability as their separation distance evolves on algebraically slow time scales. The RG approach employed here validates the interaction laws of quasi-steady pulse patterns obtained formally in the literature, and establishes that the pulse dynamics reduce to a closed system of ordinary differential equations for the activator pulse locations. Moreover, we fully justify the reduction to the nonlocal eigenvalue problem (NLEP) showing the large difference between the quasi-steady NLEP operator and the operator arising from linearization about the pulse is controlled by the resolven
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