Approximate localised dihedral patterns near a Turing instability
Dan J. Hill, Jason J. Bramburger, David J.B. Lloyd

TL;DR
This paper develops a mathematical framework for understanding the emergence of localized dihedral patterns, including hexagons, near Turing instabilities in reaction-diffusion systems, combining analytical and computational methods.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach using radial spatial dynamics and algebraic matching to prove the existence of localized dihedral patterns in higher dimensions.
Findings
Existence of localized dihedral patterns near Turing instability.
Analytical proof of localized hexagon patches with large Fourier modes.
Application of computer-assisted methods to confirm pattern existence.
Abstract
Fully localised patterns involving cellular hexagons or squares have been found experimentally and numerically in various continuum models. However, there is currently no mathematical theory for the emergence of these localised cellular patterns from a quiescent state. A key issue is that standard techniques for one-dimensional patterns have proven insufficient for understanding localisation in higher dimensions. In this work, we present a comprehensive approach to this problem by using techniques developed in the study of axisymmetric patterns. Our analysis covers localised patterns equipped with a wide range of dihedral symmetries, avoiding a restriction to solutions on a predetermined lattice. The context in this paper is a theory for the emergence of such patterns near a Turing instability for a general class of planar reaction-diffusion equations. Posing the reaction-diffusion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation · Mathematical Dynamics and Fractals · Cellular Automata and Applications
