Special Session 82: Dissipative Systems and Applications

A two-layer heterogeneous green roof mathematical model.

Ruben De La Cruz
Universidad Politecnica de Madrid
Spain
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
We propose a mathematical model to analyze the thermal behavior of extensive green roofs. This model is based on an energy balance for buildings with vegetation cover. The two-layer model includes a vegetation layer and a substrate layer, as well as the energy exchange between them. The unknowns in this problem are the temperatures of each layer which are described by a coupled system of two parabolic partial differential equations with Robin boundary conditions. One of the main feedback mechanisms is evapotranspiration, that is, the combined process of plant transpiration and substrate evaporation. The model takes into account the latent heat of fusion, due to the phase change of liquid water to ice or vice versa in the porous substrate. The modeling involves multivalued terms, and regularizing maximal monotone graphs is crucial to the mathematical treatment. We approximate the solutions to the parabolic system of partial differential equations using the finite volume method with the Weighted Essentially Non-Oscillatory (WENO) technique for spatial reconstruction and the third-order SSPRK method for time integration. This is a joint work with L.Tello.

Effects of temporal variations on wave speeds of bistable traveling waves for Lotka-Volterra competition systems

Weiwei Ding
South China Normal University
Peoples Rep of China
Co-Author(s):    Zhanghua Liang
Abstract:
This talk is concerned with the bistable traveling waves for two-species Lotka-Volterra competition systems in time periodic environments. We focus especially on the influence of the temporal period, with existence results established for both small and large periods. We also show the existence of, and derive explicit formulas for, the limiting speeds as the period tends to zero or infinity, and provide estimates for the corresponding rates of convergence. Furthermore, we analyze the sign of wave speed. Based on our explicit formulas for the limiting speeds, we construct an example in which the sign of wave speed changes with the temporal period. This example reveals that temporal variations can significantly influence competition outcomes, enabling different species to become dominant under different periods.

Precise propagation dynamics of the nonlocal KPP free boundary problem with nonsymmetric kernels

Yihong Du
University of New England (Australia)
Australia
Co-Author(s):    Xiangdong Fang, Wenjie Ni
Abstract:
Sharp estimates of the spreading rates for the nonlocal KPP free boundary problem with symmetric kernels have been established by Du and Ni (Math Ann 2024, JEMS 2025). In this talk we report some recent progresses on the precise propagation profile of this model with nonsymmetric kernels, where significant differences arise. These include sharp conditions governing linear spreading (spreading with finite speed) and accelerated spreading (spreading with infinite speed), and precise rates of spreading.

Propagation dynamics on hexagonal lattice

Jian Fang
Harbin Institute of Technology
Peoples Rep of China
Co-Author(s):    Yijun Lou, Yifei Li, Jian Wang
Abstract:
We investigate the propagation dynamics of discretized reaction-diffusion equations in hexagonal lattice. From both analytical and numerical viewpoint we identify some angular dependencies on the speeds of traveling waves.

Modeling Density-Dependent Emigration Between Two Competing Species of Tribolium: Part II -- Results

Jerome Goddard II
Auburn University Montgomery
USA
Co-Author(s):    J. T. Cronin & R. Shivaji
Abstract:
We present experimental and modeling results for a two-species Tribolium system designed to investigate how density-dependent emigration influences long-term population outcomes. Using data from 12-generation replicate microcosm experiments, together with a parameterized reaction diffusion Lotka-Volterra model, we study the effects of intraspecific density, competitor density, patch size, and permeability on emigration and persistence. By propagating parameter variability through the model, we obtain probabilistic predictions for long-term steady states and compare these predictions with persistence patterns observed in the microcosms. The results suggest that intraspecific density plays a leading role in shaping emigration behavior, while habitat structure also substantially affects long-term outcomes. This talk emphasizes the main qualitative and probabilistic results, along with the extent to which the model captures experimentally observed persistence and exclusion patterns.

Dynamics of an SIS epidemic model with population outflow on the boundary

Yu Jin
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
USA
Co-Author(s):    Yaru Hu, Jinfeng Wang
Abstract:
We consider a reaction-diffusion SIS epidemic model with population outflow on the boundary in a spatially heterogeneous environment. The main feature of our model is that the total population is variable. We introduce a basic reproduction number and use it to establish threshold-type results on the global dynamics. In particular, our highlight is that the introduction of population outflow on the boundary tends to suppress the persistence of the disease to some extent.

Measure-Based Differential Operators and Equations with Distributed Delay

Marek Kryspin
Wroclaw University of Science and Technology
Poland
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
We present results on existence and uniqueness, mild solutions, and a measure-based integration approach for a broad class of differential and pseudo-differential equations with distributional delay on $[-1,0]$. We consider the differential problem\r\n\begin{equation*}\r\nx`(t) =\int_{[-1, 0]} x(t + s) \, d \mu (s; t), \r\n\end{equation*} \r\nor, more generally, \r\n\begin{equation*}\r\n(D x)(t) =\int_{[-1, 0]} x(t + s) \, d \mu(s; t),\r\n\end{equation*}\r\nwith an appropriate initial condition $x{\restriction}_{[-1,0]}$. Here $D$ is the pseudo-differential operator defined for some signed measure $\alpha$ via a generalized Newton-Leibniz identity\r\n\begin{equation*}\r\nx(t) - x(s) =\int_{[s, t]} (D x) (\xi) \, d \alpha(\xi). \r\n\end{equation*}\r\nFor a given measure $\alpha$, we define the function space on which the operator $D$ is well-defined. We also present random versions of these equations, as well as models based on partial differential equations, which appear to be more suitable for applications in biology and mathematical ecology. Such problems provide a starting point for the study of random dynamical systems generated by the associated solution operator

The energy (and its dissipation) in the chemotaxis-consumption system

Johannes Lankeit
Leibniz University Hannover
Germany
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
With a new look at the (quasi-)energy in the basic chemotaxis-consumption system and the corresponding dissipation terms, we treat global existence of weak solutions, their eventual smoothness and large-time asymptotics. (This talk is based on joint work with M. Winkler.)

Can disease invasion match population expansion in a time-periodic SI free boundary model?

Yijun Lou
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Hong Kong
Co-Author(s):    Yijie Zha
Abstract:
This talk presents the invasion dynamics of a time-periodic reaction-diffusion SI model with a free boundary. Employing the theory of time-varying domains and internally chain transitive sets, we rigorously establish a spreading-vanishing dichotomy for both the host population and the disease, and derive sharp criteria characterizing the conditions for spreading and vanishing. Furthermore, in the spreading scenario, we determine the asymptotic speed of the expanding population front, and compare it with the spreading speed of disease invasion. Various scenarios are presented to examine whether the speed of disease invasion can match that of host expansion, with corresponding sharp conditions provided. Further numerical simulations will be presented to validate theoretical results.

A differential equation approach to the study of random SIR models with vital dynamics and time-varying vaccination rate

Javier L\`opez-de-la-Cruz
Universidad Polit\`ecnica de Madrid
Spain
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
Epidemics have profoundly affected humanity throughout history, causing not only severe human losses but also major social and economic disruptions. Many infectious diseases that have produced large outbreaks in the past still persist today, while new ones continue to emerge. For this reason, mathematical models play a crucial role in understanding disease dynamics and in designing strategies to control their spread. One of the fundamental models in mathematical epidemiology is the classical SIR model introduced by Kermack and McKendrick in 1927. This compartmental model divides the population into three groups: susceptible, infected, and recovered individuals. Despite its importance, the classical SIR framework relies on several simplifying assumptions, such as constant population size, deterministic transmission, and the absence of vaccination, which limit its applicability to real epidemic scenarios. In this talk, we study more realistic epidemic models obtained by extending the classical SIR framework. In particular, we incorporate demographic effects and time-dependent vaccination, and we also introduce randomness in key parameters, such as the transmission rate, to capture the inherent variability observed in real epidemics. Using systems of differential equations, we analyze the resulting models and investigate the conditions under which the disease either dies out or persists in the population. Finally, we complement the theoretical results with numerical simulations and discuss their epidemiological interpretation.

Time-periodic carrying simplex for a competitive system of Carath\`eodory ODEs

Janusz Mierczy\`nski
Wroc{\l}aw University of Science and Technology
Poland
Co-Author(s):    Stephen Baigent
Abstract:
Carrying simplices (CSs) are a powerful tool in the investigation of competitive systems of ordinary differential equations (ODEs), as well as their time-discrete counterparts (both give rise to dissipative dynamical systems). Roughly speaking, they are unordered invariant sets, Lipschitz homeomorphic to the standard probability simplex, and forming the joint boundary between the repulsion sets of the origin and the point at infinity. We prove the existence and investigate properties of time-periodic family of CSs for totally competitive time-periodic systems of ODEs where the right-hand sides satisfy the Carath\`eodory-type conditions. We utilize an existence theory of CSs for retrotone time-discrete dynamical systems, developed earlier by us, where the CS is defined as the joint limit of monotone sequences of images of a given set. This is a joint work with Stephen Baigent, UCL.

A competition model with nonlocal diffusion and free boundaries

wenjie ni
University of New England
Australia
Co-Author(s):    Yihong Du and Linfei Shi
Abstract:
We investigate the long-time dynamics of a two-species competition model of Lotka Volterra type with nonlocal diffusions. In this setting, a native species occupies the whole environment, while an invading species spreads with two moving fronts, forming a habitat that expands over time. The system is modeled by a reaction diffusion equation with free boundaries, and the key question is whether the invaded region eventually remains bounded or grows without limit.

Existence Results for Elliptic and Parabolic Bernoulli Free Boundary Problems with Radon Measure Data

Juan Francisco JF Padial
Depto Matem\`atica Aplicada. Universidad Polit\`ecnica de Madrid
Spain
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
The classical semilinear problem \[ -\Delta u = F(x,u) \qquad \text{in }\Omega\subset\mathbb{R}^N, \] has been widely studied when the nonlinearity $F$ is a given function. However, several models in Physics and Mechanics naturally lead to equations of the form \(-\Delta u = \mu(x,u),\) where $\mu$ is a Radon measure depending on the solution itself. A relevant example is the interior Bernoulli free boundary problem, in which the measure is supported on the unknown interface. In the elliptic setting, D\`{\i}az--Padial--Rakotoson (2007) developed an existence theory for such problems, showing that the Bernoulli condition can be expressed through the identity \[ \int_\Omega |\nabla u|^{p-2}\nabla u\cdot\nabla\varphi\,dx = \int_{\partial(u^{-1}(1))} q\,\varphi\, d\mathcal{H}_{N-1}, \] highlighting the role of the measure as a Lagrange multiplier on the free boundary. This work extends that framework to the \emph{evolutionary} setting. A semi-implicit time discretization transforms the parabolic problem into a sequence of elliptic problems of the previous type. This scheme can be viewed as a backward Euler approximation of the parabolic Bernoulli problem, where the regularization around the Bernoulli level set yields diffuse approximations of the measure. Passing to the limit provides a time-dependent Radon measure supported on the evolving free boundary. Combining this approach with a Ghoussoub--Preiss mountain pass argument yields existence of weak solutions to the evolutionary Bernoulli free boundary problem.

Local or non local properties of the solutions of some elliptic and parabolic PDE`s

Maria Michaela MM Porzio
Sapienza University of Rome
Italy
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
In this talk we discuss the influence of the data on some properties of the solutions to equations of Leray-Lions type in the elliptic case together with the evolutionary one. Significant cases are the heat equation and the degenerate p-Laplacian equation (slow diffusion). We show that there are properties which are determined by the local properties of the data and some other properties which have not a local nature. In particular, we study the impact of the data on the sign of the solutions in all the domain or in a subset with non null measure.

DYNAMICS AND SMOOTH GLOBAL ATTRACTOR FOR A THERMOELASTIC GREEN-LINDSAY PLATE

Paulo Nicanor Seminario Huertas
Polytechnic University of Madrid
Spain
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
In this talk, we investigate the asymptotic dynamics of a thermoelastic plate of Green-Lindsay type, a model characterized by two relaxation times that exhibits finite-speed heat waves. Recently, the well-posedness and exponential stability of the homogeneous linear problem were established, although it remained an open question whether the domain of the semigroup generator is compactly embedded into the energy space. We address this challenge by studying the system in the presence of a nonlinear foundation. By overcoming the technical difficulties associated with the lack of compact embedding, we prove the existence of a finite-dimensional smooth global attractor for the associated dynamical system.

Modeling Post-Infection Mortality: A Tale of Two Incidence Functions

Zhisheng Shuai
University of Central Florida
USA
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
Post-infection mortality is an important yet often overlooked factor in epidemiological modeling, as it directly influences both disease prevalence and long-term population structure. In this work, we revisit and analyze a compartmental model that explicitly incorporates post-infection mortality along with partial immunity, and we investigate how disease outcomes depend on the choice of incidence function. Under mass-action incidence, the inclusion of post-infection mortality can generate complex dynamics, including bifurcations that lead to recurrent outbreaks. In contrast, when standard incidence is used, such oscillatory behavior is greatly reduced or eliminated, and the system typically converges to a stable endemic state. Our results show that modeling post-infection mortality in combination with different transmission assumptions leads to markedly different qualitative and quantitative outcomes, underscoring its significance for understanding persistent infections and for guiding more realistic epidemiological predictions.

On the Uniqueness and Multiplicity of positive solutions to an elliptic spectral problem with concave and convex nonlinearity

Peter Takac
University of Rostock
Germany
Co-Author(s):    J. Benedikt, P. Girg, and L. Kotrla
Abstract:
We will discuss the question of {\it\bfseries existence\/} and {\it\bfseries multiplicity\/} of {\it positive solutions\/} to the semilinear elliptic Dirichlet problem % \begin{equation} \label{e:semi-lin} \begin{alignedat}{3} {}- \Delta u = \lambda\, u(x)^{q(x) - 1} + f(x,u(x)) \quad\mbox{ for }\, x\in \Omega \,;\qquad u = 0 \quad\mbox{ on }\, \partial\Omega \,, \end{alignedat} \end{equation} % where $\Omega\subset \RR^N$ is a bounded domain with the boundary of class $C^{1,\alpha}$, $\lambda\in \RR$ a spectral parameter, and $f(x,u) = |u|^{r-1}\, u$ is a \underline{\bf signed $r$\--power} ($r > 0$) of the unknown function of (a positive variable) $u\in (0,\infty)$ which depends on the point $x\in \Omega$; $r = q(x) - 1$, for instance. We will briefly present basic methods for treating the semilinear problem \eqref{e:semi-lin} with a {\it\bfseries convex\/} and {\it\bfseries concave\/} non\-linear reaction % \begin{math} f(x, \,\cdot\,)\colon s\longmapsto |s|^{q(x) - 2} s\colon \RR_+\subset \RR\to \RR \end{math} % which (for $s\geq 0$) is {\it\bfseries convex\/} in a nonempty open subset % \begin{math} \Omega_{+}\eqdef \{ x\in \Omega\colon q(x) > 2\} \end{math} % and {\it\bfseries concave\/} in another nonempty open subset % \begin{math} \Omega_{-}\eqdef \{ x\in \Omega\colon q(x) < 2\} \end{math} % of a bounded domain $\Omega\subset \mathbb{R}^N$. Here, $\lambda\in \RR_+$ is a non\-negative spectral parameter which decides about the existence and multiplicity of positive weak solutions (at least two) to problem \eqref{e:semi-lin} in case we take $f\equiv 0$. Our main contribution is a method how to handle the interplay between {\it convex\/} and {\it concave\/} non\-linearities in two disjoint nonempty open subsets of a domain $\Omega$ (connected in $\RR^N$), as opposed to the classical works assuming a non\-linearity $f(s)$ being {\it concave\/} for small values of $s\in \RR_+$ and {\it convex\/} for large $s\in \RR_{+}$, uniformly in $\Omega$.

On a Global Climate Model with Nonlinear Diffusion and non-monotone Coalbedo.

Lourdes Tello
Universidad Politecnica de Madrid
Spain
Co-Author(s):    
Abstract:
We study a climate model based on a global energy balance, formulated through a parabolic equation. The space domain of this equation is a manifold that simulates the Earth`s surface. The diffusion operator is nonlinear. The model includes the effect of Coalbedo, which is one of the mean temperature feedbacks. Coalbedo is modelled as a multivalued function. We extend some mathematical results proven for maximal monotone Coalbedo to cases where the Coalbedo is not monotone with respect to temperature. Furthermore, we analyse the number of steady states according to one parameter.

Typical behavior of differentially positive systems on a globally orderable Riemannian manifold

Yi Wang
University of Science and Technology of China
Peoples Rep of China
Co-Author(s):    Lin Niu
Abstract:
Differentially positive systems are nonlinear systems whose linearization along trajectories preserves a cone field on a smooth Riemannian manifold. The structures of cone field come from general relativity and Lie theory. In this talk, we will show that almost all (in both topological and measure-theoretic sense) orbits are convergent to certain single equilibrium. This solved a reduced version of Forni-Sepulchre`s conjecture in 2016 for globally orderable manifolds.

Global dynamics of reaction-diffusion systems with a time-varying domain

Xiaoqiang Zhao
Memorial University of Newfoundland
Canada
Co-Author(s):    King-Yeung Lam, Xiao-Qiang Zhao and Min Zhu
Abstract:
In this talk, I will report our recent research on the global dynamics of a large class of reaction-diffusion systems with a time-varying domain. By appealing to the theories of asymptotically autononmous and periodic semiflows, we establish the threshold type results on the long-time behavior of solutions for such a system in the cases of asymptotically bounded and periodic domains, respectively. To investigate the model system in the case of asymptotically unbounded domain, we first prove the global attractivity for nonautonomous reaction-diffusion systems with asymptotically vanishing diffusion coefficients via the method of sub- and super-solutions, and then use the comparison arguments to obtain the threshold dynamics. We also apply these analytical results to a reaction-diffusion model of Dengue fever transmission to study the effect of time-varying domain on the basic reproduction number.