We use cookies to distinguish you from other users and to provide you with a better experience on our websites. Close this message to accept cookies or find out how to manage your cookie settings.
To save content items to your account,
please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies.
If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account.
Find out more about saving content to .
To save content items to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org
is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings
on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part
of your Kindle email address below.
Find out more about saving to your Kindle.
Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations.
‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi.
‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.
In this paper, we consider reaction-diffusion epidemic models with mass action or standard incidence mechanism and study the impact of limiting population movement on disease transmissions. We set either the dispersal rate of the susceptible or infected people to zero and study the corresponding degenerate reaction-diffusion model. Our main approach to study the global dynamics of these models is to construct delicate Lyapunov functions. Our results show that the consequences of limiting the movement of susceptible or infected people depend on transmission mechanisms, model parameters and population size.
We find explicit estimates for the exponential rate of long-term convergence for the ruin probability in a level-dependent Lévy-driven risk model, as time goes to infinity. Siegmund duality allows us to reduce the problem to long-term convergence of a reflected jump-diffusion to its stationary distribution, which is handled via Lyapunov functions.
This paper is devoted to studying the long-term behaviour of a continuous-time Markov chain that can be interpreted as a pair of linear birth processes which evolve with a competitive interaction; as a special case, they include the famous Lotka–Volterra interaction. Another example of our process is related to urn models with ball removal. We show that, with probability one, the process eventually escapes to infinity by sticking to the boundary in a rather unusual way.
We investigate the stability and periodic orbits of a predator-prey model with harvesting. The model has a biologically-meaningful interior, an attractor undergoing damped oscillations, and can become destabilised to produce periodic orbits via a Hopf bifurcation. Some sufficient conditions for the existence of the Hopf bifurcation are established, and a stability analysis for the periodic solutions using a Lyapunov function is presented. Finally, some computer simulations illustrate our theoretical results.
We give a criterion for unlimited growth with positive probability for a large class of multidimensional stochastic models. As a by-product, we recover the necessary and sufficient conditions for recurrence and transience for critical multitype Galton–Watson with immigration processes and also significantly improve some results on multitype size-dependent Galton–Watson processes.
We consider the flow of gas through pipelines controlled by a compressorstation. Under a subsonic flow assumption we prove the existenceof classical solutions for a given finite time interval.The existence result is used to construct Riemannian feedback laws and to prove a stabilization result for a coupled system of gas pipes with a compressorstation. We introduce a Lyapunov function and prove exponential decay with respect to the L2-norm.
A nonlinear system of two delay differential equations is proposed to modelhematopoietic stem cell dynamics. Each equation describes the evolution of asub-population, either proliferating or nonproliferating. The nonlinearityaccounting for introduction of nonproliferating cells in the proliferating phaseis assumed to depend upon the total number of cells. Existence and stabilityof steady states are investigated. A Lyapunov functional is built to obtain theglobal asymptotic stability of the trivial steady state. The study ofeigenvalues of a second degree exponential polynomial characteristic equationallows to conclude to the existence of stability switches for the uniquepositive steady state. A numerical analysis of the role of each parameter on theappearance of stability switches completes this analysis.
In this paper several models in virus dynamics with and without immune response arediscussed concerning asymptotic behaviour. The case of immobile cells but diffusing viruses andT-cells is included. It is shown that, depending on the value of the basic reproductive number R0of the virus, the corresponding equilibrium is globally asymptotically stable. If R0 < 1 then thevirus-free equilibrium has this property, and in case R0 > 1 there is a unique disease equilibriumwhich takes over this property.
Normed ergodicity is a type of strong ergodicity for which convergence of the nth step transition operator to the stationary operator holds in the operator norm. We derive a new characterization of normed ergodicity and we clarify its relation with exponential ergodicity. The existence of a Lyapunov function together with two conditions on the uniform integrability of the increments of the Markov chain is shown to be a sufficient condition for normed ergodicity. Conversely, the sufficient conditions are also almost necessary.
One of the
simplest and natural appealing motion control strategies for robot manipulators
is the PD control with feedforward compensation. Although successful experimental
tests of this control scheme have been published since the
beginning of the eighties, the proof of global asymptotic stability
has remained unattended until now. The contribution of this paper
is to prove that global asymptotic stability can be guaranteed
provided that the proportional and derivative gains are adequately selected.
The performance of the PD control with feedforward compensation evaluated
on a two degrees-of-freedom direct-drive arm appears as fine as
the classical model-based computed torque control scheme.
This paper studies the connection between the dynamical and equilibrium behaviour of large uncontrolled loss networks. We consider the behaviour of the number of calls of each type in the network, and show that, under the limiting regime of Kelly (1986), all trajectories of the limiting dynamics converge to a single fixed point, which is necessarily that on which the limiting stationary distribution is concentrated. The approach uses Lyapunov techniques and involves the evolution of the transition rates of a stationary Markov process in such a way that it tends to reversibility.
We prove a theorem which can be used to show that the expectation of a non-negative function of the state of a time-homogeneous Markov process is uniformly bounded in time. This is reminiscent of the classical theory of non-negative supermartingales, except that our analog of the supermartingale inequality need not hold almost surely. Consequently, the theorem is suitable for establishing the stability of systems that evolve in a stabilizing mode in most states, though from certain states they may jump to a less stable state. We use this theorem to show that ‘joining the shortest queue' can bound the expected sum of the squares of the differences between all pairs among N queues, even under arbitrarily heavy traffic.
Let Xn be non-negative random variables, possessing the Markov property. We given criteria for deciding whether Pr(Xn →∞) is positive or 0. It turns out that essentially this depends on the magnitude of E(Xn+1 | Xn = x) compared to that of E(X2n+1 | Xn = x) for large x. The assumptions are chosen such that for example population-dependent branching processes can be treated by our results.
Recommend this
Email your librarian or administrator to recommend adding this to your organisation's collection.