Stationary peaks in a multivariable reaction--diffusion system: Foliated snaking due to subcritical Turing instability
Edgar Knobloch, Arik Yochelis

TL;DR
This paper investigates localized structures in a reaction-diffusion model relevant to lung development, revealing a foliated snaking bifurcation pattern linked to subcritical Turing instability and eigenvalue exchange points.
Contribution
It uncovers a novel foliated snaking bifurcation structure in a complex reaction-diffusion system with implications for biological pattern formation.
Findings
Localized solutions form a foliated snaking pattern.
Eigenvalue exchange points influence bifurcation structure.
Multitude of multipulse states observed.
Abstract
An activator-inhibitor-substrate model of side-branching used in the context of pulmonary vascular and lung development is considered on the supposition that spatially localized concentrations of the activator trigger local side-branching. The model consists of four coupled reaction-diffusion equations and its steady localized solutions therefore obey an eight-dimensional spatial dynamical system in one dimension (1D). Stationary localized structures within the model are found to be associated with a subcritical Turing instability and organized within a distinct type of foliated snaking bifurcation structure. This behavior is in turn associated with the presence of an exchange point in parameter space at which the complex leading spatial eigenvalues of the uniform concentration state are overtaken by a pair of real eigenvalues; this point plays the role of a Belyakov-Devaney point in…
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