Quasilinear non-uniformly parabolic-elliptic system modelling chemotaxis with volume filling effect. Existence and uniqueness of global-in-time solutions
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2469345
zbMath1128.92005MaRDI QIDQ2469345
Cristian Morales-Rodrigo, Tomasz Cieślak
Publication date: 5 February 2008
Published in: Topological Methods in Nonlinear Analysis (Search for Journal in Brave)
uniquenessglobal-in-time existenceprevention of blow-upchemotaxis equationsquasilinear reaction-diffusion systems
Nonlinear initial, boundary and initial-boundary value problems for linear parabolic equations (35K60) Reaction-diffusion equations (35K57) Cell movement (chemotaxis, etc.) (92C17) Qualitative properties of solutions to partial differential equations (35B99)
Related Items
Global boundedness in a quasilinear chemotaxis system with general density-signal governed sensitivity, Infinite time blow-up of many solutions to a general quasilinear parabolic-elliptic Keller-Segel system, Global boundedness of solutions to a quasilinear chemotaxis system with nonlocal nonlinear reaction, On the global existence of solutions to an aggregation model, Global weak solutions of a parabolic-elliptic Keller-Segel system with gradient dependent chemotactic coefficients, Existence and uniqueness of solutions of predator-prey type model with mixed boundary conditions, Boundedness in a quasilinear parabolic-parabolic Keller-Segel system with subcritical sensitivity, On a parabolic-parabolic system with gradient dependent chemotactic coefficient and consumption, On a parabolic-elliptic system with gradient dependent chemotactic coefficient, Asymptotic behavior of solutions to a quasilinear nonuniform parabolic system modelling chemotaxis, Global existence of classical solutions to a predator-prey model with nonlinear prey-taxis, Energy and implicit discretization of the Fokker-Planck and Keller-Segel type equations, Boundedness and finite-time collapse in a chemotaxis system with volume-filling effect, An angiogenesis model with nonlinear chemotactic response and flux at the tumor boundary