We study a singular-limit problem arising in the modelling of chemical reactions. At finite ε > 0, the system is described by a Fokker-Planck convection-diffusion equation with a double-well convection potential. This potential is scaled by 1/ε, and in the limit ε → 0, the solution concentrates onto the two wells, resulting into a limiting system that is a pair of ordinary differential equations for the density at the two wells. This convergence has been proved in Peletier, Savaré, and Veneroni, SIAM Journal on Mathematical Analysis, 42(4):1805–1825, 2010, using the linear structure of the equation. In this paper we re-prove the result by using solely the Wasserstein gradient-flow structure of the system. In particular we make no use of the linearity, nor of the fact that it is a second-order system. The first key step in this approach is a reformulation of the equation as the minimization of an action functional that captures the propety of being a curve of maximal slope in an integrated form. The second important step is a rescaling of space. Using only the Wasserstein gradient-flow structure, we prove that the sequence of rescaled solutions is pre-compact in an appropriate topology. We then prove a Gamma-convergence result for the functional in this topology, and we identify the limiting functional and the differential equation that it represents. A consequence of these results is that solutions of the ε-problem converge to a solution of the limiting problem.

Passing to the Limit in a Wasserstein Gradient Flow: From Diffusion to Reaction

SAVARE', GIUSEPPE;VENERONI, MARCO
2012-01-01

Abstract

We study a singular-limit problem arising in the modelling of chemical reactions. At finite ε > 0, the system is described by a Fokker-Planck convection-diffusion equation with a double-well convection potential. This potential is scaled by 1/ε, and in the limit ε → 0, the solution concentrates onto the two wells, resulting into a limiting system that is a pair of ordinary differential equations for the density at the two wells. This convergence has been proved in Peletier, Savaré, and Veneroni, SIAM Journal on Mathematical Analysis, 42(4):1805–1825, 2010, using the linear structure of the equation. In this paper we re-prove the result by using solely the Wasserstein gradient-flow structure of the system. In particular we make no use of the linearity, nor of the fact that it is a second-order system. The first key step in this approach is a reformulation of the equation as the minimization of an action functional that captures the propety of being a curve of maximal slope in an integrated form. The second important step is a rescaling of space. Using only the Wasserstein gradient-flow structure, we prove that the sequence of rescaled solutions is pre-compact in an appropriate topology. We then prove a Gamma-convergence result for the functional in this topology, and we identify the limiting functional and the differential equation that it represents. A consequence of these results is that solutions of the ε-problem converge to a solution of the limiting problem.
2012
The Mathematics category includes resources dealing with mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics and probability.
Esperti anonimi
Inglese
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STAMPA
44
3-4
419
454
36
Attracts and collects many of the important top-quality contributions to this field of research. Stresses the interactions between analysts, geometers, and physicists. A section called "News and Views" offers an opportunity for communication among scientists working in the field by featuring discussions, announcements of meetings, reproductions of historical documents, and bibliographies. Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations attracts and collects many of the important top-quality contributions to this field of research, and stresses the interactions between analysts, geometers, and physicists. In addition, it offers an opportunity for communication among scientists working in the field through a section called "News and Views," which is open to discussions, announcements of meetings, reproductions of historical documents, and bibliographies. Coverage in the journal includes: - Minimization problems for variational integrals, existence and regularity theory for minimizers and critical points, geometric measure theory - Variational methods for partial differential equations, linear and nonlinear eigenvalue problems, bifurcation theory - Variational problems in differential and complex geometry - Variational methods in global analysis and topology - Dynamical systems, symplectic geometry, periodic solutions of Hamiltonian systems - Variational methods in mathematical physics, nonlinear elasticity, crystals, asymptotic variational problems, homogenization, capillarity phenomena, free boundary problems and phase transitions - Monge-Ampère equations and other fully nonlinear partial differential equations related to problems in differential geometry, complex geometry, and physics. (2011) IF of the journal is 1.235 (2011) AMS-MCQ is 1.02
Gradient flows; reaction-diffusion equations; transport distances; singular perturbations; entropy and dissipation
http://www.springerlink.com/content/705026586777705g/fulltext.pdf
5
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Steffen, Arnrich; Alexander, Mielke; Mark A., Peletier; Savare', Giuseppe; Veneroni, Marco
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/273710
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