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Axisymmetric and nonaxisymmetric patterns in the cubic-quintic Swift-Hohenberg equation posed on a disk with Neumann boundary conditions are studied via numerical continuation and bifurcation analysis. Axisymmetric localized solutions in the form of spots and rings known from earlier studies persist and snake in the usual fashion until they begin to interact with the boundary. Depending on parameters, including the disk radius, these states may or may not connect to the branch of domain-filling target states. Secondary instabilities of localized axisymmetric states may create multi-arm localized structures that grow and interact with the boundary before broadening into domain filling states. High azimuthal wavenumber wall states referred to as daisy states are also found. Secondary bifurcations from these states include localized daisies, i.e., wall states localized in both radius and angle. Depending on parameters, these states may snake much as in the one-dimensional Swift-Hohenberg equation, or invade the interior of the domain, yielding states referred to as worms, or domain-filling stripes.
We show that all meromorphic solutions of the stationary reduction of the real cubic Swift-Hohenberg equation are elliptic or degenerate elliptic. We then obtain them all explicitly by the subequation method, and one of them appears to be a new elliptic solution.
In evolution equations for a complex amplitude, the phase obeys a much more intricate equation than the amplitude. Nevertheless, general methods should be applicable to both variables. On the example of the traveling wave reduction of the complex cub
We present eight types of spatial optical solitons which are possible in a model of a planar waveguide that includes a dual-channel trapping structure and competing (cubic-quintic) nonlinearity. Among the families of trapped beams are symmetric and a
We construct families of fundamental, dipole, and tripole solitons in the fractional Schr{o}dinger equation (FSE) incorporating self-focusing cubic and defocusing quintic terms modulated by factors $cos ^{2}x$ and $sin^{2}x$, respectively. While the
We explore stability regions for solitons in the nonlinear Schrodinger equation with a spatially confined region carrying a combination of self-focusing cubic and septimal terms, with a quintic one of either focusing or defocusing sign. This setting