Existence, Stability and Slow Dynamics of Spikes in a 1D Minimal Keller--Segel Model with Logistic Growth
We analyze the existence, linear stability, and slow dynamics of localized 1D spike patterns for a Keller--Segel model of chemotaxis that includes the effect of logistic growth of the cellular population. Our analysis of localized patterns for this two-component reaction-diffusion (RD) model is base...
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Zusammenfassung: | We analyze the existence, linear stability, and slow dynamics of localized 1D
spike patterns for a Keller--Segel model of chemotaxis that includes the effect
of logistic growth of the cellular population. Our analysis of localized
patterns for this two-component reaction-diffusion (RD) model is based, not on
the usual limit of a large chemotactic drift coefficient, but instead on the
singular limit of an asymptotically small diffusivity $d_2=\epsilon^2\ll 1$ of
the chemoattractant concentration field. In the limit $d_2\ll 1$, steady-state
and quasi-equilibrium 1D multi-spike patterns are constructed asymptotically.
To determine the linear stability of steady-state $N$-spike patterns we analyze
the spectral properties associated with both the ''large'' ${\mathcal O}(1)$
and the ''small'' $o(1)$ eigenvalues associated with the linearization of the
Keller--Segel model. By analyzing a nonlocal eigenvalue problem characterizing
the large eigenvalues, it is shown that $N$-spike equilibria can be
destabilized by a zero-eigenvalue crossing leading to a competition instability
if the cellular diffusion rate $d_1$ exceeds a threshold, or from a Hopf
bifurcation if a relaxation time constant $\tau$ is too large. In addition, a
matrix eigenvalue problem that governs the stability properties of an $N$-spike
steady-state with respect to the small eigenvalues is derived. From an analysis
of this matrix problem, an explicit range of $d_1$ where the $N$-spike
steady-state is stable to the small eigenvalues is identified. Finally, for
quasi-equilibrium spike patterns that are stable on an ${\mathcal O}(1)$
time-scale, we derive a differential algebraic system (DAE) governing the slow
dynamics of a collection of localized spikes. Unexpectedly, our analysis is
rather closely related to the analysis of spike patterns for the
Gierer--Meinhardt RD system. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2307.15896 |