Splitting Reactions Preserves Nondegenerate Behaviors in Chemical Reaction Networks
DOI10.1137/22m1478392zbMath1530.80003arXiv2201.13105OpenAlexW4367307452MaRDI QIDQ6045340
Publication date: 26 May 2023
Published in: SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2201.13105
Singular perturbations of ordinary differential equations (34D15) Fixed points and periodic points of dynamical systems; fixed-point index theory; local dynamics (37C25) Chemical kinetics in thermodynamics and heat transfer (80A30) Multiple scale methods for ordinary differential equations (34E13) Systems biology, networks (92C42)
Related Items (2)
Cites Work
- Sustained oscillations in the MAP kinase cascade
- Detection of Hopf bifurcations in chemical reaction networks using convex coordinates
- Global dynamics of the smallest chemical reaction system with Hopf bifurcation
- Geometric singular perturbation theory for ordinary differential equations
- Atoms of multistationarity in chemical reaction networks
- Autophosphorylation and the dynamics of the activation of Lck
- Adding species to chemical reaction networks: preserving rank preserves nondegenerate behaviours
- Joining and decomposing reaction networks
- Inheritance of oscillation in chemical reaction networks
- Oscillations and bistability in a model of ERK regulation
- Oscillations in multi-stable monotone systems with slowly varying feedback
- Dynamics of ERK regulation in the processive limit
- Power-Law Kinetics and Determinant Criteria for the Preclusion of Multistationarity in Networks of Interacting Species
- The Inheritance of Nondegenerate Multistationarity in Chemical Reaction Networks
- Limit cycles in mass-conserving deficiency-one mass-action systems
- Building Oscillatory Chemical Reaction Networks by Adding Reversible Reactions
- The smallest bimolecular mass action reaction networks admitting Andronov–Hopf bifurcation
This page was built for publication: Splitting Reactions Preserves Nondegenerate Behaviors in Chemical Reaction Networks