Theory of spiral wave dynamics in weakly excitable media: asymptotic reduction to a kinematic model and applications
Vincent Hakim, Alain Karma

TL;DR
This paper develops an asymptotic, kinematic model for spiral wave dynamics in weakly excitable media, providing exact predictions for behaviors like rotation, drift, and instability, validated by numerical simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a rigorous derivation of a wave tip equation of motion in weakly excitable media, linking large-scale spiral dynamics to a simplified kinematic model.
Findings
Predicts steady rotation frequency and core radius.
Provides an exact treatment of meandering instability.
Shows linearly unstable multi-armed spiral waves.
Abstract
In a weakly excitable medium, characterized by a large threshold stimulus, the free end of an isolated broken plane wave (wave tip) can either rotate (steadily or unsteadily) around a large excitable core, thereby producing a spiral pattern, or retract causing the wave to vanish at boundaries. An asymptotic analysis of spiral motion and retraction is carried out in this weakly excitable large core regime starting from the free-boundary limit of the reaction-diffusion models, valid when the excited region is delimited by a thin interface. The wave description is shown to naturally split between the tip region and a far region that are smoothly matched on an intermediate scale. This separation allows us to rigorously derive an equation of motion for the wave tip, with the large scale motion of the spiral wavefront slaved to the tip. This kinematic description provides both a physical…
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