On the stability of periodic solutions in the perturbed chemostat
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1.
Projet MERE INRIA-INRA, UMR Analyse des Systèmes et Biométrie INRA, 2, pl. Viala, 34060 Montpellier
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2.
Department of Mathematics, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803-4918
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3.
Department of Mathematics, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-8105
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Received:
01 May 2006
Accepted:
29 June 2018
Published:
01 February 2007
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MSC :
93D20.
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We study the chemostat model for one species competing for one
nutrient using a Lyapunov-type analysis. We design the dilution rate
function so that all solutions of the chemostat converge to a
prescribed periodic solution.
In terms of chemostat biology, this means that no matter what
positive initial levels for the species concentration and nutrient
are selected, the long-term species concentration and substrate
levels closely approximate a prescribed oscillatory behavior. This
is significant because it reproduces the realistic ecological
situation where the species and substrate concentrations oscillate.
We show that the stability is maintained when the model is augmented
by additional species that are being driven to extinction. We also
give an input-to-state stability result for the chemostat-tracking
equations for cases where there are small perturbations acting on
the dilution rate and initial concentration. This means that the
long-term species concentration and substrate behavior enjoys a
highly desirable robustness property, since it continues to
approximate the prescribed oscillation up to a small error when
there are small unexpected changes in the dilution rate function.
Citation: Frédéric Mazenc, Michael Malisoff, Patrick D. Leenheer. On the stability of periodic solutions in the perturbed chemostat[J]. Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering, 2007, 4(2): 319-338. doi: 10.3934/mbe.2007.4.319
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Abstract
We study the chemostat model for one species competing for one
nutrient using a Lyapunov-type analysis. We design the dilution rate
function so that all solutions of the chemostat converge to a
prescribed periodic solution.
In terms of chemostat biology, this means that no matter what
positive initial levels for the species concentration and nutrient
are selected, the long-term species concentration and substrate
levels closely approximate a prescribed oscillatory behavior. This
is significant because it reproduces the realistic ecological
situation where the species and substrate concentrations oscillate.
We show that the stability is maintained when the model is augmented
by additional species that are being driven to extinction. We also
give an input-to-state stability result for the chemostat-tracking
equations for cases where there are small perturbations acting on
the dilution rate and initial concentration. This means that the
long-term species concentration and substrate behavior enjoys a
highly desirable robustness property, since it continues to
approximate the prescribed oscillation up to a small error when
there are small unexpected changes in the dilution rate function.
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