A repertoire of repulsive Keller–Segel models with logarithmic sensitivity: Derivation, traveling waves, and quasi-stationary dynamics
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López Fernández, José LuisEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Chemotaxis Logarithmic sensitivity Repulsive Keller–Segel model Schrödinger–Doebner–Goldin equation Stationary solutions Traveling waves
Date
2022-08-24Referencia bibliográfica
López, JL. A repertoire of repulsive Keller–Segel models with logarithmic sensitivity: Derivation, traveling waves, and quasi-stationary dynamics. Math Meth Appl Sci. 2022; 1- 25. doi:[10.1002/mma.8638]
Sponsorship
Spanish Government RTI2018-098850-B-I00 Junta de Andalucia; European Commission PY18-RT-2422 B-FQM-580-UGR; Universidad de Granada/CBUAAbstract
In this paper, we show how the chemotactic model
{partial derivative(t)rho = d(1) Delta(x)rho - del(x) . (rho del(x)c)
partial derivative(t)c = d(2) Delta(x)c + F(rho, c, del(x)rho, del(x)c, Delta x rho)
introduced in Alejo and Lopez (2021), which accounts for a chemical production-degradation operator of Hamilton-Jacobi type involving first- and second-order derivatives of the logarithm of the cell concentration, namely,
F = mu + tau c - sigma rho + A Delta(x)rho/rho + B vertical bar del(x)rho vertical bar(2)/rho(2) + C vertical bar del(x)c vertical bar(2),
with mu, tau, sigma, A, B, C is an element of R, can be formally reduced to a repulsive Keller-Segel model with logarithmic sensitivity
{ partial derivative(t)rho = D-1 Delta(x)rho + chi del(x) . (rho del(x) log(c)), chi, lambda, beta > 0,
partial derivative(t)c = D-2 Delta(x)c + lambda rho c - beta c
whenever the chemotactic parameters are appropriately chosen and the cell concentration keeps strictly positive. In this way, some explicit solutions (namely, traveling waves and stationary cell density profiles) of the former system can be transferred to a number of variants of the the latter by means of an adequate change of variables.