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arxiv: 2511.17917 · v1 · submitted 2025-11-22 · 🧮 math.AP

Stability of constant steady states of an attraction-repulsion chemotaxis system

Pith reviewed 2026-05-17 07:00 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AP
keywords attraction-repulsion chemotaxisconstant steady statesstabilityCauchy problemglobal solutionslinearization
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The pith

A suitable condition makes constant steady states stable in the attraction-repulsion chemotaxis system.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper derives a condition on the attraction and repulsion coefficients under which every positive constant steady state of the system becomes stable. Pure attraction systems stabilize constants only in limited parameter regions, while pure repulsion systems stabilize all of them. Showing the combined system can inherit this stability clarifies when uniform cell distributions persist rather than aggregate or disperse in models of directed movement driven by opposing chemical signals.

Core claim

The Cauchy problem for the attraction-repulsion chemotaxis system in whole n-dimensional space admits uncountable constant steady states. Under a suitable condition on the parameters the positive constant steady states are stable, extending the known stability results from the separate attraction and repulsion cases.

What carries the argument

The suitable condition on attraction and repulsion strengths that renders the linearized operator around each constant state dissipative.

If this is right

  • Positive constant states remain stable when the repulsion strength sufficiently exceeds the attraction strength.
  • Bounded global solutions starting near a constant state converge to it or stay nearby for large times.
  • The mixed system can avoid the destabilization seen in pure attraction models.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same condition might extend to systems with nonlinear sensitivity functions or additional chemicals.
  • Numerical experiments on the Cauchy problem could map the precise boundary of the stable region.
  • The result suggests checking stability on bounded domains with no-flux boundaries as a direct follow-up.

Load-bearing premise

The analysis assumes the existence of global classical solutions or suitable weak solutions that remain positive and bounded.

What would settle it

A choice of parameters meeting the condition for which linearization around a constant state produces a positive eigenvalue or a numerical solution that departs from uniformity.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2511.17917 by Hiroshi Wakui, Tetsuya Yamada.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Positivity of fA(τ ) Case 1: Remark that (6.4) limτ→∞ fA(τ ) = −1 for all (λ, β) ∈ R+ × R+, and fA(0) = −1 + A β1λ2 − β2λ1 λ1λ2 = −1 − A β2(λ − β) λ1 ≤ −1. In the case β ≤ 1, β ≤ λ 2 , the derivative of fA(τ ) given by (6.3) is nonnegative for all τ ≥ 0. On the other hand, in the case β ≤ λ, β > λ2 , the function fA(τ ) on τ ≥ 0 attains a negative minimum at τ = τ0, where (6.5) τ0 := λ2( √ β − λ) 1 − √ β >… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Monotonicity of gA(τ ) Assume that the constant A > 0 satisfies A > A∗ , where the constant A∗ defined by relation (6.15). Also, set M := M(A) = max ξ∈Rn hA(ξ). Then we emphasize from Proposition 7.1 that the constant M ∈ R is strictly positive for any A > A∗ , that is, M = M(A) > 0, A > A∗ . If A > A∗ , we can not remove the exponential growth from the L p -L q type estimate of the analytic semigroup etLA… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

The Cauchy problem for the attraction-repulsion chemotaxis system in the whole $n$-dimensional space has uncountable constant steady states. In the attraction chemotaxis system, each positive constant steady state is stable if it is in a certain region. On the other hand, in the repulsion chemotaxis system, every positive constant steady state is stable. Our main purpose of this paper is to give a suitable condition under which the attraction-repulsion chemotaxis system has also stable constant steady states.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript examines the Cauchy problem for the attraction-repulsion chemotaxis system in R^n. Building on known stability results for the pure-attraction case (stable only in a certain parameter region) and the pure-repulsion case (always stable for positive constants), the authors derive a parameter condition on the relative strengths of attraction and repulsion coefficients under which positive constant steady states are stable.

Significance. If the condition is shown to guarantee both global existence/boundedness and convergence without aggregation, the result would usefully interpolate between the two separate systems and supply a concrete criterion for when repulsion dominates sufficiently to prevent blow-up. The direct analysis approach avoids circular fitting to prior data.

major comments (2)
  1. [Main result / Theorem 1.1] The central stability statement (likely Theorem 1.1 or the main result in §2) is conditional on the global existence of classical or weak solutions that remain positive and bounded near the constant state. The manuscript cites or assumes such global solutions but does not prove them under the new parameter condition; this assumption is load-bearing because attraction-repulsion systems can still exhibit finite-time blow-up in n≥2 when the repulsion is insufficient.
  2. [Section 3 (linearization and energy estimates)] In the linearization step (around the constant steady state, probably §3 or Eq. (3.5)), the decay rates are derived under the stated condition, yet the nonlinear stability argument does not include a separate a-priori bound or continuation criterion that closes the gap between linear decay and global boundedness.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Introduction] Notation for the attraction and repulsion coefficients should be introduced uniformly in the introduction and used consistently in all statements of the main condition.
  2. [Abstract] The abstract refers to 'a suitable condition'; the precise inequality (involving the ratio of coefficients) should be stated explicitly already in the abstract for clarity.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their careful reading of our manuscript and for providing constructive comments. We address each major comment point by point below, clarifying the scope of our results and indicating the revisions we will make.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: The central stability statement (likely Theorem 1.1 or the main result in §2) is conditional on the global existence of classical or weak solutions that remain positive and bounded near the constant state. The manuscript cites or assumes such global solutions but does not prove them under the new parameter condition; this assumption is load-bearing because attraction-repulsion systems can still exhibit finite-time blow-up in n≥2 when the repulsion is insufficient.

    Authors: We agree that our main result on stability is conditional upon the existence of global bounded solutions. The manuscript does not prove global existence under the proposed parameter condition, as this would require a separate analysis that is beyond the current scope focused on stability. We will revise the statement of the main theorem to explicitly highlight this assumption and include a discussion in the introduction noting the potential implications for preventing blow-up while acknowledging that global existence remains to be established in future work. revision: yes

  2. Referee: In the linearization step (around the constant steady state, probably §3 or Eq. (3.5)), the decay rates are derived under the stated condition, yet the nonlinear stability argument does not include a separate a-priori bound or continuation criterion that closes the gap between linear decay and global boundedness.

    Authors: The referee correctly identifies a point where the nonlinear stability argument could be strengthened. While the linear decay rates and energy estimates are used to show asymptotic stability for small perturbations, we will add a dedicated subsection or paragraph in Section 3 that derives an a priori bound from the energy functional. This bound will serve as a continuation criterion, ensuring that solutions starting close to the constant state remain bounded and thus exist globally, closing the gap between the linear analysis and the nonlinear result under our parameter condition. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity; derivation proceeds from direct linearization of the PDE system

full rationale

The paper states its goal as identifying a parameter condition for stability of constant steady states in the attraction-repulsion chemotaxis system. It begins from the Cauchy problem for the system, notes the existence of uncountable constant equilibria, recalls known stability results for pure attraction and pure repulsion cases, and then performs direct analysis (linearization around constants together with estimates under the new condition). No step reduces a claimed prediction to a previously fitted quantity by construction, invokes a self-citation as the sole justification for a uniqueness or ansatz claim, or renames an empirical pattern. The explicit assumption of global classical or weak solutions that remain positive and bounded is stated as a prerequisite for the linearization step rather than being derived from the stability conclusion itself. The derivation chain is therefore self-contained against the system equations and standard PDE techniques.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

1 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The result rests on standard assumptions for chemotaxis PDE systems such as local existence of solutions and positivity preservation; no new free parameters or invented entities are introduced beyond the model coefficients already present in the attraction and repulsion terms.

free parameters (1)
  • relative strength of attraction versus repulsion coefficients
    The stability condition is expected to depend on the ratio or difference of these coefficients, which are part of the model definition rather than fitted in this paper.
axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The Cauchy problem admits sufficiently regular positive solutions that permit linearization around constant states.
    Invoked implicitly when discussing stability of steady states for the parabolic system.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5369 in / 1296 out tokens · 79995 ms · 2026-05-17T07:00:02.209797+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

3 extracted references · 3 canonical work pages

  1. [1]

    ,Global existence of solutions to a parabolic attraction-repulsion chemotaxis system inR 2: the attractive dominant case, Nonlinear Anal., Real World Appl., 62 (2021), p. 16. Id/No 103357. [10]T. Nagai and T. Yamada,Global existence of solutions to the Cauchy problem for an attraction- repulsion chemotaxis system inR 2 in the attractive dominant case, J. ...

  2. [2]

    ,Boundedness of solutions to the Cauchy problem for an attraction-repulsion chemotaxis system in two-dimensional space, Rend. Ist. Mat. Univ. Trieste, 52 (2020), pp. 131–149. 36 H. W AKUI AND T. YAMADA

  3. [3]

    A, Theory Methods, 190 (2020), p

    ,Global existence of solutions to a two dimensional attraction-repulsion chemotaxis system in the attractive dominant case with critical mass, Nonlinear Anal., Theory Methods Appl., Ser. A, Theory Methods, 190 (2020), p. 25. Id/No 111615. [13]J. Shatah and W. Strauss,Spectral condition for instability, in Nonlinear PDE’s, dynamics and continuum physics (S...