Precise computations of chemotactic collapse using moving mesh methods
Publication:703773
DOI10.1016/j.jcp.2004.07.010zbMath1063.65096OpenAlexW2105835312MaRDI QIDQ703773
R. Carretero-González, Robert D. Russell, Chris J. Budd
Publication date: 11 January 2005
Published in: Journal of Computational Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcp.2004.07.010
numerical examplesreaction-diffusion equationblowup solutionsadaptive mesh methodschemotactic collapsechemotaxis systems
Reaction-diffusion equations (35K57) Classical flows, reactions, etc. in chemistry (92E20) Method of lines for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs (65M20)
Related Items (27)
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Global and exploding solutions in a model of self-gravitating systems.
- Initiation of slime mold aggregation viewed as an instability
- Model for chemotaxis
- Traveling bands of chemotactic bacteria: a theoretical analysis
- Large amplitude stationary solutions to a chemotaxis system
- Nonlinear aspects of chemotaxis
- Self-similar blow-up for a reaction-diffusion system
- Moving mesh methods based on moving mesh partial differential equations
- On spherically symmetric gravitational collapse
- A moving collocation method for solving time dependent partial differential equations
- Singularity patterns in a chemotaxis model
- Stability of Some Mechanisms of Chemotactic Aggregation
- Finite-time aggregation into a single point in a reaction - diffusion system
- On Explosions of Solutions to a System of Partial Differential Equations Modelling Chemotaxis
- Diffusion, attraction and collapse
- Moving Mesh Partial Differential Equations (MMPDES) Based on the Equidistribution Principle
- A System of Reaction Diffusion Equations Arising in the Theory of Reinforced Random Walks
- Aggregation, Blowup, and Collapse: The ABC's of Taxis in Reinforced Random Walks
- Moving Mesh Methods for Problems with Blow-Up
- Blowup of nonradial solutions to parabolic-elliptic systems modeling chemotaxis in two-dimensional domains
- On a uniformly accurate finite difference approximation of a singularly perturbed reaction-diffusion problem using grid equidistribution
This page was built for publication: Precise computations of chemotactic collapse using moving mesh methods