Quasisolitons in self-diffusive excitable systems, or Why asymmetric diffusivity obeys the Second Law
Abstract
Solitons, defined as nonlinear waves which can reflect from boundaries or transmit through each other, are found in conservative, fully integrable systems. Similar phenomena, dubbed quasi-solitons, have been observed also in dissipative, “excitable” systems, either at finely tuned parameters (near a bifurcation) or in systems with cross-diffusion. Here we demonstrate that quasi-solitons can be robustly observed in excitable systems with excitable kinetics and with self-diffusion only. This includes quasi-solitons of fixed shape (like KdV solitons) or envelope quasi-solitons (like NLS solitons). This can happen in systems with more than two components, and can be explained by effective cross-diffusion, which emerges via adiabatic elimination of a fast but diffusing component. We describe here a reduction procedure can be used for the search of complicated wave regimes in multi-component, stiff systems by studying simplified, soft systems.
- Publication:
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Scientific Reports
- Pub Date:
- August 2016
- DOI:
- 10.1038/srep30879
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1605.00521
- Bibcode:
- 2016NatSR...630879B
- Keywords:
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- Nonlinear Sciences - Pattern Formation and Solitons
- E-Print:
- 11 pages, 2 figures, as accepted to Scientific Reports on 2016/07/07