dampdiffuse
Dampdiffuse is a term used in physics and applied mathematics to describe transport phenomena in which diffusion is supplemented by dissipative (damping) effects from the surrounding medium. In its simplest linear form, the dampdiffusive equation can be written as ∂u/∂t = D ∇^2 u − α u, where u(x,t) is the transported quantity, D is the diffusion coefficient, and α > 0 is a damping rate. This model captures both spreading due to diffusion and exponential attenuation due to damping. In regimes where inertial effects are significant, a second-order-in-time formulation such as ∂^2u/∂t^2 + γ ∂u/∂t = D ∇^2 u (the damped telegraph or Cattaneo-type equation) is sometimes used, yielding finite-speed propagation of disturbances and a crossover from wave-like to diffusive behavior.
Dampdiffuse phenomena appear in porous or viscous media, polymeric solutions, and crowded biological environments, where biophysical
Relation to standard diffusion is that damping introduces an extra term that suppresses amplitude and can