Turing Patterning in Stratified Domains
Andrew L. Krause, V\'aclav Klika, Jacob Halatek, Paul K., Grant, Thomas E. Woolley, Neil Dalchau, Eamonn A. Gaffney

TL;DR
This paper develops a framework for understanding Turing pattern formation in layered media, revealing how coupling and geometry influence instability and patterning in reaction-diffusion systems across stratified domains.
Contribution
It introduces a novel modeling approach for bi-layer reaction-diffusion systems, deriving new instability conditions and an alternative method for eigenfunction computation in stratified media.
Findings
Coupling between layers can suppress or enhance pattern formation.
Geometry and coupling parameters have non-monotonic effects on instabilities.
Thin-layer regimes simplify the classical Turing conditions.
Abstract
Reaction-diffusion processes across layered media arise in several scientific domains such as pattern-forming E. coli on agar substrates, epidermal-mesenchymal coupling in development, and symmetry-breaking in cell polarisation. We develop a modelling framework for bi-layer reaction-diffusion systems and relate it to a range of existing models. We derive conditions for diffusion-driven instability of a spatially homogeneous equilibrium analogous to the classical conditions for a Turing instability in the simplest nontrivial setting where one domain has a standard reaction-diffusion system, and the other permits only diffusion. Due to the transverse coupling between these two regions, standard techniques for computing eigenfunctions of the Laplacian cannot be applied, and so we propose an alternative method to compute the dispersion relation directly. We compare instability conditions…
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