On a Model for Mass Aggregation with Maximal Size
Abstract
We study a kinetic mean-field equation for a system of particles with different sizes, in which particles are allowed to coagulate only if their sizes sum up to a prescribed time-dependent value. We prove well-posedness of this model, study the existence of self-similar solutions, and analyze the large-time behavior mostly by numerical simulations. Depending on the parameter , which controls the probability of coagulation, we observe two different scenarios: For there exist two self-similar solutions to the mean field equation, of which one is unstable. In numerical simulations we observe that for all initial data the rescaled solutions converge to the stable self-similar solution. For , however, no self-similar behavior occurs as the solutions converge in the original variables to a limit that depends strongly on the initial data. We prove rigorously a corresponding statement for . Simulations for the cross-over case are not completely conclusive, but indicate that, depending on the initial data, part of the mass evolves in a self-similar fashion whereas another part of the mass remains in the small particles.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0912.1797,
title = {On a Model for Mass Aggregation with Maximal Size},
author = {Ondrej Budáč and Michael Herrmann and Barbara Niethammer and Andrej Spielmann},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0912.1797},
year = {2012}
}
Comments
new version with revised proofs; 13 pages, several figures