Existence of a degenerate singularity in the high activation energy limit of a reaction-diffusion equation
G.S. Weiss, G. Zhang

TL;DR
This paper constructs a specific example of a degenerate singularity in the high activation energy limit of a reaction-diffusion equation, demonstrating an unstable singularity that was previously conjectured but not explicitly shown.
Contribution
It provides the first explicit example of a degenerate, unstable singularity in the high activation energy limit of a reaction-diffusion problem.
Findings
Existence of a sequence of solutions converging to a limit with a degenerate singularity.
The singularity is characterized by the vanishing scaled limit of the solution near the boundary point.
Answers an open question about the nature of such singularities in reaction-diffusion equations.
Abstract
We consider the singular perturbation problem where , is a Lipschitz continuous function such that in , outside and . We construct an example exhibiting a {\em degenerate singularity} as . More precisely, there is a sequence of solutions as , and there exists such that Known results suggest that this singularity must be {\em unstable}, which makes it hard to capture analytically and numerically. Our result answers a question raised by Jean-Michel Roquejoffre at the FBP'08 in Stockholm.
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Taxonomy
TopicsDifferential Equations and Numerical Methods · Advanced Mathematical Modeling in Engineering · Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations
