The Turing instability paradigm is revisited in the context of a multispecies diffusion scheme derived from a self-consistent microscopic formulation. The analysis is developed with reference to the case of two species. These latter share the same spatial reservoir and experience a degree of mutual interference due to the competition for the available resources. Turing instability can set in for all ratios of the main diffusivities, also when the (isolated) activator diffuses faster then the (isolated) inhibitor. This conclusion, at odd with the conventional vision, is here exemplified for the Brusselator model and ultimately stems from having assumed a generalized model of multispecies diffusion, fully anchored to first principles, which also holds under crowded conditions

Turing instabilities in reaction-diffusion systems with cross diffusion / Duccio Fanelli;Claudia Cianci;Francesca Di Patti. - In: THE EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL. B, CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS. - ISSN 1434-6028. - STAMPA. - 86:(2013), pp. 142-150. [10.1140/epjb/e2013-30649-7]

Turing instabilities in reaction-diffusion systems with cross diffusion

FANELLI, DUCCIO;CIANCI, CLAUDIA;DI PATTI, FRANCESCA
2013

Abstract

The Turing instability paradigm is revisited in the context of a multispecies diffusion scheme derived from a self-consistent microscopic formulation. The analysis is developed with reference to the case of two species. These latter share the same spatial reservoir and experience a degree of mutual interference due to the competition for the available resources. Turing instability can set in for all ratios of the main diffusivities, also when the (isolated) activator diffuses faster then the (isolated) inhibitor. This conclusion, at odd with the conventional vision, is here exemplified for the Brusselator model and ultimately stems from having assumed a generalized model of multispecies diffusion, fully anchored to first principles, which also holds under crowded conditions
2013
86
142
150
Duccio Fanelli;Claudia Cianci;Francesca Di Patti
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/828700
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