Reductions of Reaction-Transport-Equations by Dr. Thomas Hillen Department of Mathematics, University of Utah INSCC 110, 3:30pm Monday, March 22, 1999 Abstract In this talk I consider nonlinear transport equations which are relevant as models for biological populations. The full kinetic transport model is hard to analyze analytically and numerically. Hence one is forced to consider caricatures of the full model, which cover the right dynamic behavior. Two approaches are presented here: 1. From the transport equation one can derive a (infinite) sequence of hyperbolic subsystems for the velocity moments. Here I present an energy method to close the first two moment equations (Cattaneo approximation). 2. In a limit of high speed and small mean free path length the transport model behaves like a diffusion process (parabolic limit). I will give higher order approximations, based on this scaling property, and I will discuss Hilbert's paradox. (This part is joint work with H. Othmer). A study of error estimates shows that the Cattaneo approximation is accurate for all times on large space scales, whereas the parabolic limit describes the long time asymptotics of the transport problem. Request for preprints and reprints to Thomas Hillen This information can be found at http://www.math.utah.edu/research/