A Morse-Smale ordinary differential equation in \(\mathbb{R}^N\)
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2285462
DOI10.1016/j.jde.2019.09.025zbMath1432.35130OpenAlexW2976032251MaRDI QIDQ2285462
Publication date: 8 January 2020
Published in: Journal of Differential Equations (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jde.2019.09.025
Attractors (35B41) Nonlinear initial, boundary and initial-boundary value problems for linear parabolic equations (35K60) Attractors of solutions to ordinary differential equations (34D45) Morse-Smale systems (37D15) Semilinear parabolic equations with Laplacian, bi-Laplacian or poly-Laplacian (35K91)
Related Items (3)
Entanglement in site diluted quantum two-dimensional antiferromagnet ⋮ Morse-Smale inequalities and Chafee-Infante attractors ⋮ Continuity of attractors for singularly perturbed semilinear problems with nonlinear boundary conditions and large diffusion
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Some infinite-dimensional Morse-Smale systems defined by parabolic partial differential equations
- On the explicit construction of an ODE which has the same dynamics as a scalar parabolic PDE
- Parabolic problems with nonlinear boundary conditions and critical nonlinearities
- A scalar parabolic equation whose asymptotic behavior is dictated by a system of ordinary differential equations
- Upper semicontinuity for attractors of parabolic problems with localized large diffusion and nonlinear boundary conditions
- Dynamics in infinite dimensions. Appendix by Krzysztof P. Rybakowski.
- Nonautonomous perturbations of Morse-Smale semigroups: stability of the phase diagram
- Rate of convergence of attractors for singularly perturbed semilinear problems
- Continuity of the attractors in a singular problem arising in composite materials
- Localized Spatial Homogenization and Large Diffusion
- Attractors of parabolic problems with nonlinear boundary conditions. uniform bounds
This page was built for publication: A Morse-Smale ordinary differential equation in \(\mathbb{R}^N\)