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Long-time behavior and Darwinian optimality for an asymmetric size-structured branching process

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We study the long time behavior of an asymmetric size-structured measure-valued growth-fragmentation branching process that models the dynamics of a population of cells taking into account physiological and morphological asymmetry… Click to show full abstract

We study the long time behavior of an asymmetric size-structured measure-valued growth-fragmentation branching process that models the dynamics of a population of cells taking into account physiological and morphological asymmetry at division. We show that the process exhibits a Malthusian behavior; that is that the global population size grows exponentially fast and that the trait distribution of individuals converges to some stable distribution. The proof is based on a generalization of Lyapunov function techniques for non-conservative semi-groups. We then investigate the fluctuations of the growth rate with respect to the parameters guiding asymmetry. In particular, we exhibit that, under some special assumptions, asymmetric division is optimal in a Darwinian sense.

Keywords: size; time behavior; asymmetric size; size structured; long time; process

Journal Title: Journal of Mathematical Biology
Year Published: 2021

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