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Global existence and blow-up analysis to a cooperating model with self-diffusion
Advances in Difference Equations volume 2014, Article number: 166 (2014)
Abstract
In this paper, a two-species cooperating model with free diffusion and self-diffusion is investigated. The existence of the global solution is first proved by using lower and upper solution method. Then the sufficient conditions are given for the solution to blow up in a finite time. Our results show that the solution is global if the intra-specific competition is strong, while if the intra-specific competition is weak and the self-diffusion rate is small, blow-up occurs provided that the initial value is large enough or the free diffusion rate is small. Numerical simulations are also given to illustrate the blow-up results.
MSC:35K57, 92D25.
1 Introduction
In this paper, we are concerned with the following nonlinear reaction-diffusion system:
where is the Laplace operator, Ω is a bounded domain in with smooth boundary ∂ Ω. , , , , and () are positive constants. System (1.1) is usually referred as the cooperating two-species Lotka-Volterra model describing the interaction of diffusive biological species. The spatial density of the i th species at time t is represented by and its respective free diffusion rate is denoted by . is the self-diffusion rate. The real number is the net birth rate of the i th species and , are the crowding-effect coefficients. The parameters and measure cooperations between the species. The known is a smooth function satisfying the compatibility condition for . The boundary conditions in (1.1) imply that the habitat is surrounded by a totally hostile environment.
Recently, the global existence or blow-up problem for parabolic equations describing the ecological models have been considered by many authors, e.g. [1–11]. In [10], Pao studied the following cooperating model with free diffusion:
here all parameters are positive constants except and which can be chosen positive, zero or negative. He proved that a unique solution of (1.2) exists and is uniformly bounded in if , while if the solution blows up in a finite time for big with any nontrivial nonnegative initial data or for any with big initial data. His results imply that the solution is global if the intra-specific competition is strong, while the solution may blow up if the intra-specific competition is weak. Lou et al. [7] considered the problem (1.2) with homogeneous Neumann boundary conditions and studied the effect of diffusion on the blow-up. They gave a sufficient condition on the initial data for the solution to blow up in a finite time. Wang et al. [11] studied a reaction-diffusion system with nonlinear absorption terms and boundary flux. Some sufficient conditions for global existence and finite time blow-up of the solutions are given.
On the other hand, Shigesada et al. [12] in 1979 proposed a generalization of Lotka-Volterra competing model in order to describe spatial segregation of interacting population species in one space dimension. More and more attention has been given to the SKT model with other types of reaction terms. For example, the two-species prey-predator model is in [13, 14], two-species cooperating model is in [15], three-species cooperating model is in [16, 17]. These works concentrate on the existence of time-dependent solution or uniform boundedness and stability of global solutions. In this paper we are interested in studying the blow-up properties of the solution and we will consider the effect of self-diffusion coefficients and on the long time behaviors of the solution.
The content of this paper is organized as the follows: In Section 2, the existence and uniqueness of global solution are given by using upper and lower solutions and their associated monotone iterations as in [18]. Section 3 is devoted to a sufficient condition for the solution to blow up. Numerical illustrations are performed in Section 4 and a brief discussion is also given in Section 5.
2 Existence of global solution
This section is devoted to the global existence of (1.1). First we give the definition of ordered upper and lower solutions of (1.1), then a pair of ordered upper and lower solutions is constructed.
Definition 2.1 A pair of functions , in are called ordered upper and lower solutions of the problem (1.1), if and if satisfies the relations
and satisfies the above inequalities in reversed order.
Define
Since we only consider the positive solution, then we have the inverse
which is an increasing function of . In view of , we may write the problem (1.1) in the equivalent form
Let , , it is easy to see and are ordered upper and lower solutions of (2.3).
Define and
where μ is a positive constant such that
for any and . The problem (2.3) becomes
We denote by the space of all bounded and continuous functions in , the vector-value functions are denoted by . Set
where and . It is easy to see, for any , if then
Before constructing monotone sequences, we present the following positivity lemma, which will be used in the proof of the monotone property of the sequences.
Lemma 2.1 (Lemma 2.1 of [18])
Let in , on , and let either (i) in or (ii) be bounded in . If satisfies the following inequalities:
then in .
By using either or as the initial iteration we can construct a sequence from the nonlinear iteration process
for any m and .
Since the equation in (2.6) is equivalent to
under the same boundary and initial conditions, the existence of the sequence is ensured by [19] (Chapter V, Section 7). Denote the sequence by if , and by if , and refer to them as maximal and minimal sequences, respectively. The following lemma shows that the sequences are monotone.
Lemma 2.2 The sequences , defined by (2.6) possess the monotone property
, where and .
Proof Let , combining (2.6) with the definition of the lower solution yields
Moreover, by the mean value theorem, we have
for some intermediate value between and . Then we have
where
On the other hand,
It follows from Lemma 2.1 that , which leads to , and thus . A similar argument gives and . Moreover, based on (2.5) and (2.6) we know that satisfies
where , is between and for .
Using Lemma 2.1 again, we have , which leads to and therefore . Moreover,
Assume by induction that if
holds for some . Then satisfies
By the mean value theorem, we obtain
for some intermediate value between and . It is easy to see that
where .
By Lemma 2.1, we have , which leads to and thus . Similarly, we have and . The conclusion of the lemma follows from the induction principle. □
From the proof of Lemma 2.2, we know that the following comparison principle holds.
Lemma 2.3 (Comparison Principle)
Let and in be the ordered upper and lower solutions of the problem (1.1), respectively. Then we have
In view of Lemma 2.2, the pointwise limits
exist and satisfy .
Now we show that () and is the unique solution of (1.1).
Theorem 2.1 Let , be a pair of ordered upper and lower solutions of problem (1.1). Then the sequences , obtained from (2.6) converge monotonically to the unique solution of problem (2.3), and they satisfy the relation
Moreover, is the unique solution of problem (1.1).
The proof of this theorem is similar to Theorem 3.1 in [18], so we omit it here.
The existence and uniqueness of the solution to problem (1.1) can be ensured by constructing a pair of ordered upper and lower solutions of (1.1). In fact, we only need to construct a bounded positive upper solution since that we can take as lower solution. We have the following theorem.
Theorem 2.2 If , then for any nonnegative initial data, problem (1.1) admits a unique global solution , which is uniformly bounded in .
Proof Let be a positive solution of the following problem:
and let , then , where is a constant such that and
It is easily to check that is the upper solution of problem (1.1). Further, is global and uniformly bounded. The desired results can obtain from Theorem 2.1. □
Remark 2.1 For the problem (1.1) with the Neumann boundary condition instead of the Dirichlet boundary condition, it can be discussed similarly. For the one-dimensional case, we can also obtain the existence and uniform boundedness of the global solution by using Gagliardo-Nirenberg-type inequalities; see [17] for details.
3 Blow-up of the solution
In this section, we consider the existence of the blow-up solution. Here we say the solution blows up in a finite time if
To get the blow-up results for the system (1.1), we first consider the scalar problem:
where k, D, b, and α are positive constants.
Lemma 3.1 The problem
has a nontrivial nonnegative solution if , where λ is the first eigenvalue of Laplace operator subject to the homogeneous Dirichlet boundary condition.
The proof of Lemma 3.1 is similar to that of Lemma 11.7.1 of [10], where , and we omit it here.
Lemma 3.2 Let be a nontrivial nonnegative solution of problem (3.1). If
then in .
Proof Under the transform , the problem (3.1) becomes
where .
Using the comparison principle and assumptions on , we have in . So in . Then using again the comparison principle yields in for an arbitrarily small . Hence in . □
Lemma 3.3 Let λ be the first eigenvalue of Laplace operator subject to the homogeneous Dirichlet boundary condition. If and one of the following conditions holds:
-
(i)
;
-
(ii)
the initial data is large enough,
then all nontrivial nonnegative solutions of problem (3.1) blow up.
Proof Let be the corresponding eigenfunction of the eigenvalue λ, which is chosen to satisfy . Define
Then using the first equation in (3.1) and integrating by parts yield
-
(i)
If and , we get
obviously blows up in a fine time, and so does .
-
(ii)
If and the initial data is large enough so that
then there exists such that . Therefore for and . Based on the discussion, we show that if the initial value is large enough the solution of problem (3.1) must blow up in a finite time. Thereby blows up in finite time. □
Our main result in this section can now be stated as follows.
Theorem 3.1 Assume that , are small enough and
-
(i)
If , then the solution of problem (1.1) with any nontrivial nonnegative initial value blows up.
-
(ii)
If the initial value is large enough,
then the solution of (1.1) blows up.
Proof To show this, it suffices to construct a lower solution of (2.3) and prove the lower solution blows up in a finite time with some suitable conditions.
Take , where () is positive constant to be defined later, is a nonnegative function in and vanishes on the boundary, the functions are same as in Section 2. From Definition 2.1 and (2.3) we know that is the lower solution of (2.3) if satisfies the following inequalities:
which is equivalent to
If we choose , then (3.5) holds when
Now we consider the right hand sides of the first and second inequalities in (3.6); it is easy to check that
holds, provided that
which is equivalent to
Recalling the assumption (3.4) shows that there exists a small such that
Thus (3.6) holds if
If , take
then (3.7) holds if
Take ; then (3.8) can be written
Let ; then (3.9) holds provided that
where for .
First we discuss the case when the initial value is large enough. By Lemma 3.1, problem (3.2) has a nontrivial nonnegative solution, denoted by . We define to be the solution of (3.1) with . Then it is easy to see that from Lemma 3.2. So if and , the pair is a lower solution of (1.1). On the other hand, if follows from Lemma 3.3 that the solution must blow up in a finite time provided that . So if and are sufficiently large, then the pair blows up. Therefore the solution of (1.1) blows up in a finite time.
Second, we consider the case that and , are small enough. For an arbitrary nontrivial nonnegative initial data , the solution of (1.1) is positive for by Lemma 3.2. Further, we may assume that and for , otherwise replace the initial function by for some .
Let be the eigenfunction corresponding to the eigenvalue λ, then there exists suitable , such that , . Choosing , then satisfies (3.2) with and and define be the solution of (3.1) with the initial data . Then and is monotone nondecreasing in t by Lemma 3.2. Moreover, it follows from the comparison principle that and in , where is the maximal existent time of , , and . Hence is a lower solution of (1.1).
On the other hand, Lemma 3.3 ensures the existence of a finite such that the solution exists in and is unbounded in Ω as . Thus the solution of (1.1) cannot exist beyond and is nonglobal. This finishes the proof. □
4 Numerical illustrations
In this section, we present some numerical simulations to investigate the blow-up results in Theorem 3.1. Symbolic mathematical software Matlab 7.0 is used to plot numerical graphs. For simplicity, we always take .
Example 4.1 (Case (i))
In system (1.1), let , , , , , , , and . Take small self-diffusion rates and . Then it is easy to check that the condition (3.5) is satisfied. Choose the initial values of and to be and , respectively, and the solution of the system blows up, as shown in Figure 1.
Example 4.2 (Case (ii))
In system (1.1), take , , , () as in Example 4.1. Let and . Then it is easy to check the condition (3.4) hold. We choose and to be and , respectively. According to Theorem 3.1, if the initial value is large enough the solution of the system blows up. Figure 2 shows the phenomenon.
5 Discussions
In this paper, we consider a two-species cooperating model with free diffusion and self-diffusion. Our main purpose is to find sufficient conditions for the solution to blow up in a finite time. The results show that the global solution exists if , i.e. the inter-specific competition is strong.
If the inter-specific competition is weak, Theorem 3.1 shows that blow-up occurs provided that the initial value is large enough or the self-diffusion rate is small. The latter gives the continuity of blow-up with the self-diffusion rate since the solution without self-diffusion blows up. The former shows that the solution of the system with self-diffusion or without self-diffusion blows up if the initial value is large enough. A natural question is what the difference is between the solution with self-diffusion and without self-diffusion for the same big initial values. Let us take and all other parameters and initial value the same as in Example 4.2; we then have the following simulation; see Figure 3.
Comparing Figure 2 with Figure 3, we can see that the solution without self-diffusion blows up fast, which implies the self-diffusion can ‘relax’ the blow-up. We still have no theoretical proof, but we feel it is worth further investigation.
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Acknowledgements
The authors sincerely thank the reviewers for their valuable suggestions and useful comments that have led to the present improved version of the original manuscript. This research is supported by PRC grant NSFC 61103018, NSFC 11271197 and the NSF of Jiangsu Province BK2012682.
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Zhu, L., Ling, Z. & Lin, Z. Global existence and blow-up analysis to a cooperating model with self-diffusion. Adv Differ Equ 2014, 166 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-1847-2014-166
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-1847-2014-166
Keywords
- global solution
- blow-up
- self-diffusion
- cooperating model