Volume 1, Issue 2
Stability Analysis of an SIS Epidemic Model in Heterogeneous Environment

Xueli Bai, Wenping Du, Fang Li & Maolin Zhou

CSIAM Trans. Life Sci., 1 (2025), pp. 280-298.

Published online: 2025-06

Export citation
  • Abstract

This paper studies an susceptible-infected-susceptible reaction-diffusion model in spatially heterogeneous environment proposed in [Allen et al., Discrete Contin. Dyn. Syst., 21, 2008], where the existence and uniqueness of the endemic equilibrium are established and its stability is proposed as an open problem. However, till now, there is no progress in the stability analysis except for special cases with either equal diffusion coefficients or constant endemic equilibrium. In this paper, we demonstrate the first criterion in determining the stability of the non-constant endemic equilibrium with different diffusion coefficients. Thanks to this criterion, when one of the diffusion rates is small or large, the impact of spatial heterogeneity on the stability can be characterized based on the asymptotic behavior of the endemic equilibrium.

  • AMS Subject Headings

Primary: 92D30, 35Q92, 35B35 Secondary: 35B40, 37N25

  • Copyright

COPYRIGHT: © Global Science Press

  • Email address
  • BibTex
  • RIS
  • TXT
@Article{CSIAM-LS-1-280, author = {Bai , XueliDu , WenpingLi , Fang and Zhou , Maolin}, title = {Stability Analysis of an SIS Epidemic Model in Heterogeneous Environment}, journal = {CSIAM Transactions on Life Sciences}, year = {2025}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {280--298}, abstract = {

This paper studies an susceptible-infected-susceptible reaction-diffusion model in spatially heterogeneous environment proposed in [Allen et al., Discrete Contin. Dyn. Syst., 21, 2008], where the existence and uniqueness of the endemic equilibrium are established and its stability is proposed as an open problem. However, till now, there is no progress in the stability analysis except for special cases with either equal diffusion coefficients or constant endemic equilibrium. In this paper, we demonstrate the first criterion in determining the stability of the non-constant endemic equilibrium with different diffusion coefficients. Thanks to this criterion, when one of the diffusion rates is small or large, the impact of spatial heterogeneity on the stability can be characterized based on the asymptotic behavior of the endemic equilibrium.

}, issn = {3006-2721}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.4208/csiam-ls.SO-2024-0007}, url = {http://global-sci.org/intro/article_detail/csiam-ls/24163.html} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Stability Analysis of an SIS Epidemic Model in Heterogeneous Environment AU - Bai , Xueli AU - Du , Wenping AU - Li , Fang AU - Zhou , Maolin JO - CSIAM Transactions on Life Sciences VL - 2 SP - 280 EP - 298 PY - 2025 DA - 2025/06 SN - 1 DO - http://doi.org/10.4208/csiam-ls.SO-2024-0007 UR - https://global-sci.org/intro/article_detail/csiam-ls/24163.html KW - SIS epidemic model, endemic equilibrium, local stability, spatial heterogeneity. AB -

This paper studies an susceptible-infected-susceptible reaction-diffusion model in spatially heterogeneous environment proposed in [Allen et al., Discrete Contin. Dyn. Syst., 21, 2008], where the existence and uniqueness of the endemic equilibrium are established and its stability is proposed as an open problem. However, till now, there is no progress in the stability analysis except for special cases with either equal diffusion coefficients or constant endemic equilibrium. In this paper, we demonstrate the first criterion in determining the stability of the non-constant endemic equilibrium with different diffusion coefficients. Thanks to this criterion, when one of the diffusion rates is small or large, the impact of spatial heterogeneity on the stability can be characterized based on the asymptotic behavior of the endemic equilibrium.

Bai , XueliDu , WenpingLi , Fang and Zhou , Maolin. (2025). Stability Analysis of an SIS Epidemic Model in Heterogeneous Environment. CSIAM Transactions on Life Sciences. 1 (2). 280-298. doi:10.4208/csiam-ls.SO-2024-0007
Copy to clipboard
The citation has been copied to your clipboard