Optimal control of age-structured population dynamics for spread of universally fatal diseases
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2841180
DOI10.1080/00036811.2011.640631zbMath1269.49033OpenAlexW2106411781WikidataQ58186715 ScholiaQ58186715MaRDI QIDQ2841180
Publication date: 24 July 2013
Published in: Applicable Analysis (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/00036811.2011.640631
Optimality conditions for problems involving partial differential equations (49K20) Control/observation systems governed by partial differential equations (93C20) Population dynamics (general) (92D25)
Related Items (3)
On the Control of the Navier-Stokes Equations and Related Systems ⋮ Dynamic Programming Viscosity Solution Approach and Its Applications to Optimal Control Problems ⋮ Optimal control of age-structured population dynamics for spread of universally fatal diseases II
Cites Work
- Optimal birth control of population dynamics
- A simplification of the Agrachev-Gamkrelidze second-order variation for bang-bang controls
- Maximum principle for optimal boundary control of the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation
- Optimal control of the primitive equations of the ocean with state constraints
- Optimal control for age-structured population dynamics of incomplete data
- Maximum principle for optimal boundary control of vibrating structures with applications to beams
- Simple explanation of the no-free-lunch theorem and its implications
- Optimal birth control of population dynamics. II: Problems with free final time, phase constraints, and mini-max costs
- Optimal intervention for epidemic models with general infection and removal rate functions
- Models for the spread of universally fatal diseases
- The Mathematics of Infectious Diseases
- On the optimal control of a deterministic epidemic
- A predictive Min-H method to improve convergence to optimal solutions
- Optimal control of deterministic epidemics
This page was built for publication: Optimal control of age-structured population dynamics for spread of universally fatal diseases