A Study of Mathematical Epidemiology Model of Dengue Spread with Fractional Properties

Sonal Jain, Ho Hon Leung, Firuz Kamalov

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

Mosquitoes in tropical regions of the world disseminate the severe and common disease dengue, which is brought on by four viruses, namely, Den 1–Den 4. A bite from a female adult Aedes mosquito can spread the disease from one person to another. Nonlocal differential operators with nonlocal and non-singular kernels can be used to represent the dynamics of spread because they transition from the exponential decay law to the power law as the waiting time distribution. The memory effect is evident because spread dynamics don’t actually follow the Markovian process. In this study, we used the recently developed fractional differential operators known as the Caputo-Fabrizio derivative to convert the classical model to a fractional kind systems in mathematics that account for crossover and memory effects. A recently developed numerical approach was used to solve the difficult unique system, and multiple numerical simulations were carried out to examine the crossover effect caused by the Mittag-Leffler law.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationTrends in Mathematics
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
Pages949-959
Number of pages11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Publication series

NameTrends in Mathematics
VolumePart F2357
ISSN (Print)2297-0215
ISSN (Electronic)2297-024X

Keywords

  • Caputo-Fabrizio derivative
  • Dengue model
  • Existence and uniqueness
  • Fixed point theorem
  • Fractional differential equations

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Mathematics

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