The Brusselator is a generic reaction-diffusion model for a tri-molecular
chemical reaction. We consider the case when the input and output reactions are
slow. In this limit, we show the existence of K-periodic, spatially bi-stable
structures, \emph{mesas}, and study their stability. Using singular
perturbation techniques, we find a threshold for the stability of K mesas.
This threshold occurs in the regime where the exponentially small tails of the
localized structures start to interact. By comparing our results with Turing
analysis, we show that in the generic case, a Turing instability is followed by
a slow coarsening process whereby logarithmically many mesas are annihilated
before the system reaches a steady equilibrium state. We also study a
``breather''-type instability of a mesa, which occurs due to a Hopf
bifurcation. Full numerical simulations are shown to confirm the analytical
results.Comment: to appear, Physica