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Cross-diffusion effects on stationary pattern formation in the FitzHugh-Nagumo model

Gaetana Gambino, Valeria Giunta Orcid Logo, Maria Carmela Lombardo, Gianfranco Rubino

Discrete and Continuous Dynamical Systems - B, Volume: 27, Issue: 12, Pages: 7783 - 7816

Swansea University Author: Valeria Giunta Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.3934/dcdsb.2022063

Abstract

We investigate the formation of stationary patterns in the FitzHugh-Nagumo reaction-diffusion system with linear cross-diffusion terms. We focus our analysis on the effects of cross-diffusion on the Turing mechanism. Linear stability analysis indicates that positive values of the inhibitor cross-dif...

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Published in: Discrete and Continuous Dynamical Systems - B
ISSN: 1531-3492 1553-524X
Published: American Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS) 2022
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa64702
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Abstract: We investigate the formation of stationary patterns in the FitzHugh-Nagumo reaction-diffusion system with linear cross-diffusion terms. We focus our analysis on the effects of cross-diffusion on the Turing mechanism. Linear stability analysis indicates that positive values of the inhibitor cross-diffusion enlarge the region in the parameter space where a Turing instability is excited. A sufficiently large cross-diffusion coefficient of the inhibitor removes the requirement imposed by the classical Turing mechanism that the inhibitor must diffuse faster than the activator. In an extended region of the parameter space a new phenomenon occurs, namely the existence of a double bifurcation threshold of the inhibitor/activator diffusivity ratio for the onset of patterning instabilities: for large values of inhibitor/activator diffusivity ratio, classical Turing patterns emerge where the two species are in-phase, while, for small values of the diffusion ratio, the analysis predicts the formation of out-of-phase spatial structures (named cross-Turing patterns). In addition, for increasingly large values of the inhibitor cross-diffusion, the upper and lower bifurcation thresholds merge, so that the instability develops independently on the value of the diffusion ratio, whose magnitude selects Turing or cross-Turing patterns. Finally, the pattern selection problem is addressed through a weakly nonlinear analysis.
Keywords: Cross-diffusion, FitzHugh-Nagumo, Turing instability, out-of-phase patterns, amplitude equations
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering
Issue: 12
Start Page: 7783
End Page: 7816