A minimalist model for coevolving supply and drainage networks

Author:

Anand Shashank Kumar1ORCID,Hooshyar Milad2ORCID,Martin Nordbotten Jan3ORCID,Porporato Amilcare4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA

2. Princeton Environmental Institute and Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA

3. Department of Mathematics, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway

4. Princeton Environmental Institute and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA

Abstract

Numerous complex systems, both natural and artificial, are characterized by the presence of intertwined supply and/or drainage networks. Here, we present a minimalist model of such coevolving networks in a spatially continuous domain, where the obtained networks can be interpreted as a part of either the counter-flowing drainage or co-flowing supply and drainage mechanisms. The model consists of three coupled, nonlinear partial differential equations that describe spatial density patterns of input and output materials by modifying a mediating scalar field, on which supply and drainage networks are carved. In the two-dimensional case, the scalar field can be viewed as the elevation of a hypothetical landscape, of which supply and drainage networks are ridges and valleys, respectively. In the three-dimensional case, the scalar field serves the role of a chemical signal, according to which vascularization of the supply and drainage networks occurs above a critical ‘erosion’ strength. The steady-state solutions are presented as a function of non-dimensional channelization indices for both materials. The spatial patterns of the emerging networks are classified within the branched and congested extreme regimes, within which the resulting networks are characterized based on the absolute as well as the relative values of two non-dimensional indices.

Funder

Innovation Award - Moore Science-to-Action Fund

Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies

Norwegian Research Council

National Science Foundation

Princeton Environmental Institute, Princeton University

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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