We analyse under which conditions equilibration between two competing effects, repulsion modelled
by nonlinear diffusion and attraction modelled by nonlocal interaction, occurs. I will discuss several
regimes that appear in aggregation diffusion problems with homogeneous kernels. I will first
concentrate in the fair competition case distinguishing among porous medium like cases and fast
diffusion like ones. I will discuss the main qualitative properties in terms of stationary states and
minimizers of the free energies. In particular, all the porous medium cases are critical while the fast
diffusion are not, and they are characterized by functional inequalites related to Hardy
-
Littlewood
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Sobolev inequalities. In the second part, I will discuss the diffusion dominated case in which this balance
leads to continuous compactly supported radially decreasing equilibrium configurations for all masses.
All stationary states with suitable regularity are shown to be radially symmetric by means of continuous
Steiner symmetrisation and mass transportation techniques. Calculus of variations tools allow us to show
the existence of global minimizers among these equilibria. Finally, in the particular case of Newtonian
interaction in two dimensions they lead to uniqueness of equilibria for any given mass up to translation
and to the convergence of solutions of the associated nonlinear aggregation
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diffusion equations
towards this unique equilibrium profile up to translations as time tends to infinity.