posted on 2023-06-09, 08:20authored byMartin Burger, Bertram Duering, Lisa Maria Kreusser, Peter A Markowich, Carola-Bibiane Schönlieb
We consider a class of interacting particle models with anisotropic, repulsive-attractive interaction forces whose orientations depend on an underlying tensor field. An example of this class of models is the so-called Kücken-Champod model describing the formation of fingerprint patterns. This class of models can be regarded as a generalization of a gradient flow of a nonlocal interaction potential which has a local repulsion and a longrange attraction structure. In contrast to isotropic interaction models the anisotropic forces in our class of models cannot be derived from a potential. The underlying tensor field introduces an anisotropy leading to complex patterns which do not occur in isotropic models. This anisotropy is characterized by one parameter in the model. We study the variation of this parameter, describing the transition between the isotropic and the anisotropic model, analytically and numerically. We analyze the equilibria of the corresponding mean-field partial differential equation and investigate pattern formation numerically in two dimensions by studying the dependence of the parameters in the model on the resulting patterns.
Funding
Novel discretisations of higher-order nonlinear PDE; G1603; LEVERHULME TRUST; RPG-2015-069
History
Publication status
Published
File Version
Accepted version
Journal
Mathematical Models and Methods in Applied Sciences