\documentclass[reqno]{amsart}
\usepackage{hyperref}

\AtBeginDocument{{\noindent\small
\emph{Electronic Journal of Differential Equations},
Vol. 2014 (2014), No. 02, pp. 1--12.\newline
ISSN: 1072-6691. URL: http://ejde.math.txstate.edu or http://ejde.math.unt.edu
\newline ftp ejde.math.txstate.edu}
\thanks{\copyright 2014 Texas State University - San Marcos.}
\vspace{9mm}}

\begin{document}
\title[\hfilneg EJDE-2014/02\hfil Monotonicity and uniqueness of traveling waves]
{Monotonicity and uniqueness of traveling waves in
bistable systems with delay}

\author[Y.-R. Yang, N.-W. Liu \hfil EJDE-2014/02\hfilneg]
{Yun-Rui Yang, Nai-Wei Liu}  

\address{Yun-Rui Yang \newline
School of Mathematics and Physics,
Lanzhou Jiaotong University,  Lanzhou, Gansu 730070, China}
\email{lily1979101@163.com}

\address{Nai-Wei Liu \newline
School of Mathematics and Information Science,
Yantai University, YanTai, Shandong  264005,  China. \newline
School of Mathematics, Shandong University,
Jinan, Shandong 250100,  China}
\email{liunaiwei@yahoo.com.cn}

\thanks{Submitted June 27, 2013. Published January 3, 2014.}
\subjclass[2000]{34K18, 37G10, 37G05}
\keywords{Monotonicity; uniqueness; Liapunov stability;
traveling waves; \hfill\break\indent super-sub solutions}

\begin{abstract}
 This article establishes the monotonicity, uniqueness and Liapunov
 stability of traveling waves for bistable systems with delay.
 We use an elementary super-subsolution comparison method and a
 moving plane technique. Also an example is given to illustrate our
 results.
\end{abstract}

\maketitle
\numberwithin{equation}{section}
\newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}[section]
\newtheorem{lemma}[theorem]{Lemma}
\newtheorem{definition}[theorem]{Definition}
\allowdisplaybreaks

\section{Introduction}

In this article, we are concerned with the monotonicity, Liapunov stability 
and uniqueness of traveling wave solutions of the bistable reaction-diffusion 
systems with delay
\begin{equation}
\begin{gathered}
\begin{aligned}
\frac{\partial u_i(x,t)}{\partial t}
&= D_i \frac{\partial^2u_i(x,t)}{\partial x^2}
 +F^i\Big(u_1(x,t-\tau),\dots,u_{i-1}(x,t-\tau),u_i(x,t),\\
&\quad u_{i+1}(x,t-\tau), \dots,u_n(x,t-\tau)\Big), \quad
 (x,t)\in \mathbb{R}\times (0,\infty),\; u_i\in \mathbb{R},
\end{aligned}\\
u_i(x,s)=u_{0i}(x,s),\quad  x\in \mathbb{R}, \;  s \in[-\tau,0].
\end{gathered}\label{101}
\end{equation}
In the previous paper \cite{Yang0,Yang}, based on the assumption 
of monotone traveling waves, we established the globally exponential 
asymptotic stability of traveling waves of system \eqref{101} 
by using the squeezing technique developed by Chen \cite{Chen}. 
Generally, the comparison principle can not be used if there is no 
monotonicity of traveling waves for the investigated systems. 
Thus, the monotonicity of traveling waves is important and necessary 
in this method. Here, we give the full detail proofs that the traveling
 waves of  \eqref{101} are monotone, which could be as a kind of 
continuity for our work in \cite{Yang0}. Moreover, we also investigated 
Liapunov stability and uniqueness of traveling waves of system \eqref{101} 
by using an elementary super-subsolution comparison method and a moving 
plane technique.

It is well known that traveling wave solutions of reaction-diffusion
systems have been applied to several subjects, such as ecology, 
chemistry, biology, and so on. See for example
\cite{Chen,llw1,Ou,Schaaf,Smith,Tsai,Volpert1,Volpert2,Wu2,Wu1,Yang}.
There are many works for the existence, uniqueness and stability of 
traveling waves in this field.
For example, by using squeezing technique, Chen \cite{Chen} established 
the global asymptotic exponential stability of traveling waves for nonlocal
evolution equations, and then proved the uniqueness of traveling waves
 by a moving plane technique. He also established the existence of 
traveling waves of this problem based on the asymptotic behavior of 
solutions obtained from the stability, combining with the monotonicity 
and uniqueness of traveling waves. For the uniqueness of traveling waves, 
see  \cite{Bates,Ber,Carr, Chen1,Chen2,Chen3,DK,zl}. 
In the classical paper, Diekmann and Kaper  \cite{DK} studied 
a particular monostable nonlocal model. Recently, Chen and Guo \cite{Chen2} 
obtained a complete uniqueness result for a generalized discrete 
version of the nonlocal monostable equations. 
The above uniqueness results are based on the method of a moving plane, 
see also \cite{Ber}. Later, Carr and Chmaj \cite{Carr} extended 
the method in \cite{DK}. In another paper, Chen and Guo \cite{Chen2} 
established the uniqueness result of traveling waves by constructing 
a Laplace transform representation of a solution and using the 
powerful Tauberian-Ikerhara's Theorem developed in \cite{DK, William,Widder}. 
For the delayed scalar equations, Schaff \cite{Schaaf} studied the existence of
monotone traveling wave solutions and uniqueness of wave speeds by a 
phase plane method.
 Smith and Zhao \cite{Smith} established globally
exponential stability and uniqueness of monotone traveling waves. 
For one-dimension systems,
Volpert et al.~\cite{Volpert1,Volpert2} obtained the existence 
of traveling waves by topological methods. Recently, Tsai \cite{Tsai} studied
globally exponential stability of traveling waves in monotone
bistable systems with partial diffusion coefficients being zero.

However, there are few results relatively about traveling waves
 of reaction-diffusion systems with delay, one can be referred 
to \cite{Ou,Wu2,Wu1,Yang,Yang2,Yang3}.  Wu and Zou \cite{Wu1} obtained 
the existence of traveling waves in quasi-monotone and
non-quasi-monotone reaction-diffusion systems with delay via the
monotone iteraction method. Ou and Wu \cite{Ou}  established
existence results of non-monotone traveling waves in monostable and
bistable cases without quasi-monotonicity for a nonlocal
reaction-diffusion system with delay. Recently, we
established the globally exponential asymptotic stability 
results of traveling waves of the bistable system \eqref{101} 
with delay in \cite{Yang0}. Motivated by Chen \cite{Chen},
 we studied the monotonicity, Liapunov stability and uniqueness 
of traveling waves for system \eqref{101} in this article.

The rest of this article is organized as follows. 
In Section 3, we give and prove the monotonicity result of traveling
 wave solutions of \eqref{101}. And then based on the stability result 
of traveling wave solutions in \cite{Yang0}, we establish and prove 
the Liapunov stability and uniqueness (up to translation) of traveling wave 
solutions in Section 4. Before doing these, we introduce some assumptions 
and notations in Section 2. Finally, as application, we give an example 
in the last Section.

\section{Preliminaries}

Our main results in this paper depend strongly  on the construction
of super-sub solutions of \eqref{101} and the comparison principle,
we first state some assumptions and definitions of super-sub solutions 
of \eqref{101} as follows.

The following assumptions are made 
and the standard notation  $ \mathbb{R}^n$ is used, see \cite{Yang}.
\begin{itemize}
\item[(H1)] Positive diffusion coefficients: $D_i>0$ for $i=1,2,\dots,n$;

\item[(H2)] Monotone system: the reaction term
\[
\mathbf{F}(\mathbf{u})
=(\mathbf{F}^{1}(\mathbf{u}), \dots, \mathbf{F}^n(\mathbf{u})),
\]
is defined on a
bounded domain $\Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^n$ and class $C^{1}$ in
$\mathbf{u}=(u_1,u_2,\dots,u_n)$. We also require that
$\mathbf{F}$ satisfy
\[
\frac{\partial F^i}{\partial u_{j}}(\mathbf{u})\geq 0\quad
\text{for $\mathbf{u}\in \Omega$  and $1\leq i\neq j\leq n$};
\]

\item[(H3)] Bistable nonlinearity: $\mathbf{F}$ has two stable
equilibrium points $\mathbf{0}\ll \mathbf{1}$; i.e. 
$\mathbf{F(0)}=\mathbf{F(1)}=mathbf{0}$ and all the eigenvalues of
$\mathbf{F'(0)}$ and $\mathbf{F'(1)}$ lie in the open left-half complex
plane. We also assume that the matrixes $\mathbf{F'(0)}$ and
$\mathbf{F'(1)}$  are irreducible.
\end{itemize}
By  (H2)-(H3)
and Perron-Frobenius Theorem (see \cite[page61, Remark 3.1]{Smith0}), 
we know that there exists a small enough vector $\mathbf{d_0}>0$
such that $F^i(\mathbf{-d_0})\gg 0$ and $F^i(1+\mathbf{d_0})\ll 0$.
Namely, $\mathbf{v}^{+}=\mathbf{1+d}_0$ and
$\mathbf{v}^{-}=-\mathbf{d}_0$ are an ordered pair of
super- and subsolutions of \eqref{101} on $[0,\infty)$. Here
$\mathbf{-d}_0=(-d_0,-d_0,\dots,-d_0)$ and
$\mathbf{1+d}_0=(1+d_0,1+d_0,\dots,1+d_0)$.


Let $C=C([-\tau,0], X)$ be the Banach space of continuous functions
from $[-\tau,0]$ into $X$ with the supremum norm, where
$X=BUC(\mathbb{R},\mathbb{R}^n)$ be the Banach space of all
bounded and uniformly continuous functions from $\mathbb{R}$ into
$\mathbb{R}^n$ with the the usual supremum norm. Let
$X^{+}=\{\mathbf{\Lambda}\in X;
\mathbf{\Lambda}(x)\geq 0, x\in \mathbb{R}\}$ and
$C^{+}=\{\mathbf{\Lambda}\in C;
 \mathbf{\Lambda}(s)\in X^{+}, s\in[-\tau,0]\}$.
 We can see that $X^{+}$ is a closed cone of
$X$ and $C^{+}$ is a positive cone of $C$. We can similarly define
$X_0=BUC(\mathbb{R},\mathbb{R})$ and $X^+_0$. For convenience, we
identify an element $\mathbf{\Lambda}\in C$ as a function
from $\mathbb{R}\times [-\tau,0]$ into $\mathbb{R}^n$ defined by
$\mathbf{\Lambda}(x,s)=(\mathbf{\Lambda}(s))(x)$, and
$\mathbf{\Lambda}=(\Lambda_i)_{i=1}^n$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$.
For any continuous vector function
$\mathbf{\Gamma}(\cdot):[-\tau,b]\to X$, $b>0$, we
define $\mathbf{\Gamma}_{t}\in C, t\in [0,b)$ by
$\mathbf{\Gamma}_{t}(s)=\mathbf{\Gamma}(t+s)$,
$s\in [-\tau,0]$. It is then easy to see that $t\mapsto
\mathbf{\Gamma}_{t}$ is a continuous vector function from
$[0,b)$ to $C$. For any $\mathbf{\Lambda}\in [{-d_0},
{1+d_0}]^n_C=\{\mathbf{\Lambda} \in C;
\mathbf{\Lambda}_i(x,s)\in [-d_0, 1+d_0], x\in
\mathbb{R}, s\in[-\tau,0], i=1,2,\dots,n\}$, define
\begin{align*}
f^i(\mathbf{\Lambda}(s))(x)
&=F^i\big(\Lambda_1(x,-\tau),\dots,
\Lambda_{i-1}(x,-\tau),
\Lambda_i(x,0),\\
&\quad \Lambda_{i+1}(x,-\tau), \dots,\Lambda_n(x,-\tau)\big),
\end{align*}
where $x\in \mathbb{R}$; therefore,
\begin{align*}
f^i(\mathbf{\Lambda}_{t}(s))(x)
&=F^i\big(\Lambda_1(x,t-\tau),\dots, \Lambda_{i-1}(x,t-\tau),
\Lambda_i(x,t),\\
&\quad \Lambda_{i+1}(x,t-\tau),\dots,\Lambda_n(x,t-\tau)\big),
\end{align*}
where
$$
[-d_0,1+d_0]_C^n=\underbrace{[-d_0,1+d_0]_C
\times[-d_0,1+d_0]_C\times \dots \times
[-d_0,1+d_0]_C}_{n\ \text{times}}.
$$
By the global Lipschitz continuity of $F^i(\cdot)$
(because $\mathbf{F}\in C^{1}$ in $\mathbf{u}$) on $[-d_0, 1+d_0]^n$,
 we can verify that
$\textbf{f}(\mathbf{\Lambda})=(f^{1}(\mathbf{\Lambda}),\dots,f^n
(\mathbf{\Lambda}))\in X$ and globally Lipschitz continuous.

We are interested in traveling wave solutions
$\mathbf{U}(\cdot)$ of \eqref{101}  connecting the two
equilibria $\mathbf{0}$ and $\mathbf{1}$. More precisely,  functions
$\mathbf{U}(\xi)=(U_1(\xi),U_1(\xi),\dots,U_n(\xi))\in
C^2(\mathbb{R})$ are said to be a traveling wave solution of
\eqref{101}, if for some $c\in \mathbb{R},
\mathbf{u}(x,t)=\mathbf{U}(x-ct)=\mathbf{U}(\xi)$ is
a solution of \eqref{101} with the property that
\begin{equation}
\mathbf{U}(-\infty)=\mathbf{0},\quad \text{and}\quad
 U(+\infty)=\mathbf{1}. \label{102}
\end{equation}
Here $c$ is the so-called wave speed associated with the profile of
the traveling wave $\mathbf{U}$. Without generality, we always assume
$c>0$ throughout this paper. Therefore, $\mathbf{U}(\xi)$
satisfies the following ordinary functional differential system
\begin{equation}
D_i\ddot{U_i}+c\dot{U_i}+F^i(U_1(\xi+c\tau),\dots,U_{i-1}(\xi+c\tau),
U_i(\xi),U_{i+1}(\xi+c\tau),\dots,U_n(\xi+c\tau))=0,
\label{103}
\end{equation}
where $\xi=x-ct \in \mathbb{R}$, for $i=1,2,\dots,n$, where ``$\cdot$''
denotes $\frac{d}{d\xi}$.


\begin{definition}\label{Definition2.1} \rm 
A continuous function $\mathbf{v}=(v_1,v_2,\dots,v_n): [-\tau, b]\to
X$, $b>0$, is called a supersolution (subsolution) of \eqref{101} on
$[0,b)$ if
\begin{equation}
v_i(t)\geq(\leq)T_i(t-s)v_i(s)+\int_{s}^{t}T_i(t-r)f^i(\mathbf{v}_{r})dr
 \label{201}
\end{equation}
for $0\leq s < t < b$ and $i=1,2\dots,n$. If $\mathbf{v}$ is
both a supersolution and a subsolution on $[0,b)$, then we call it a
mild solution of \eqref{101}.
\end{definition}

We note that $\mathbf{T}(t)=(T_i(t))_1^n$ is a strongly
continuous analytic semigroup on $X$ generated by the
$X$-realization $\mathbf{D}\Delta_X$ of
$\mathbf{D}\Delta$ with the help of \cite[Theorem 1.5]{Daners}. 
Moreover, by the explicit expression of solutions of the
heat equation
\begin{gather*}
\frac{\partial u_i}{\partial t}=D_i\Delta u_i , \quad x\in
\mathbb{R}, \; t>0,\; i=1,2,\dots,n,\\
u_i(x,0)=u_{0,i}(x),\quad  x\in \mathbb{R},
\end{gather*}
we have
\[
T_i(t)u_{0,i}(x)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{4\pi
D_i}}\int_{-\infty}^{+\infty}\exp\Big(-\frac{(x-y)^2}{4D_it}\Big)
u_{0,i}(y)dy,
\]
for $x\in \mathbb{R}$, $t>0$, $u_{0,i}(\cdot)\in BUC(\mathbb{R},\mathbb{R})$.

We have another definition that is equivalent to the one above.

\begin{definition} \label{Definition2.2} \rm 
 Assume that there is a $\mathbf{v}=(v_i)_1^n \in
BUC(\mathbb{R}\times[-\tau,b),\mathbb{R}^n)$, $b>0$ such that
$v_i$ is $C^2$ in $x\in \mathbb{R}, C^{1}$ in $t\in [0,b)$ for
$i=1,2\dots,n$, and $v_i$ satisfies
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
\frac{\partial v_i}{\partial t}
&\geq (\leq) D_i\Delta
v_i+F^i\big(v_1(x,t-\tau),\dots,v_{i-1}(x,t-\tau),v_i(x,t),
v_{i+1}(x,t-\tau),\\
&\quad  \dots,v_n(x,t-\tau)\big), \quad x\in
\mathbb{R}, \; t\in (0,b),\;  i=1,2\dots,n,
\end{aligned} \label{202}
\end{equation}
and that $| \frac{\partial v_i}{\partial t}-D_i\Delta
v_i-F^i(v_1(x,t-\tau),\dots,v_{i-1}(x,t-\tau),v_i(x,t),
v_{i+1}(x,t-\tau),\dots, \\\ v_n(x,t-\tau))|$ is bounded on
$\mathbb{R}\times [0,b)$, and that
$-d_0\leq v_i(x,t)\leq 1+d_0$ for $(x,t)\in \mathbb{R}\times [0,b)$,
$i=1,2\dots,n$.
Then $\mathbf{v}$ is a supersolution (subsolution) of
\eqref{101} on $[0,b)$.
\end{definition}

By the positivity of the linear semigroup
 $\mathbf{T}(t): X\to X$, it easily follows that \eqref{201} holds.
Therefore, Definition \ref{Definition2.2} is equivalent to
Definition \ref{Definition2.1}.

Now, we give the comparison principle for 
\eqref{101}, proved in \cite{Yang0,Yang}.

\begin{theorem} \label{thm2.3}
 Assume {\rm (H1)--(H3)} hold. Then for any
$\mathbf{u}_0\in [-d_0, 1+d_0]_C^n$, Equation \eqref{101} has
a unique mild solution $\mathbf{u}(x,t,\mathbf{u}_0)$ on
$[0,\infty)$ and  it is a
classical solution to \eqref{101} for 
$(x,t)\in \mathbb{R}\times (\tau, \infty)$. 
Furthermore, for any pair of supersolution
$\mathbf{u}_1(x,t)$ and subsolution
$\mathbf{u}_2(x,t)$ of \eqref{101} on $[0,\infty)$ with
$\mathbf{u}_1(x,t), \mathbf{u}_2(x,t)\in [-d_0,
1+d_0]^n, x\in \mathbb{R}, t\in [-\tau,\infty)$ and
$\mathbf{u}_1(x,s)\geq \mathbf{u}_2(x,s), x\in
\mathbb{R}, s\in [-\tau,0]$, then there holds
$\mathbf{u}_1(x,t)\geq \mathbf{u}_2(x,t), x\in
\mathbb{R}, t\geq 0$, where $\mathbf{u}_1=(u_{1,i})_{i=1}^n,
\mathbf{u}_2=(u_{2,i})_{i=1}^n$. At the same time, there
exists
\[
u_{1,i}(x,t)-u_{2,i}(x,t)\geq \theta_i(J,
t-t_0)\int_{z}^{z+1}\big(u_{1,i}(y,t_0)- u_{2,i}(y,t_0)\big)dy
\]
for any $J\geq 0, x\in \mathbb{R},z\in \mathbb{R}$ with $|x-z|\leq J$ and
$t>t_0\geq 0$, where
\begin{gather*}
\theta_i(J,t)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{4\pi
D_it}}\exp\Big\{-L_it-\frac{(J+1)^2}{4D_it}\Big\},\quad  J\geq 0,\; t>0,\\
L_i=\max\{|\partial_{j}F^i(\mathbf{u})|: \mathbf{u}\in
[-d_0, 1+d_0]^n \}, \quad i,j=1,2,\dots, n.
\end{gather*}
\end{theorem}


Before giving  some lemmas about the construction
of super- and subsolution of \eqref{101}, we need some preparations:
First, we use the traveling wave solution $\mathbf{U}$ and a
positive bounded vector function $\mathbf{p}$ to construct
super- and subsolution of \eqref{101}. By the hypotheses (H2)-(H3)
and Perron-Frobenius Theorem, we know that the principal eigenvalues
(the eigenvalue with the maximal real part) of $\mathbf{F'(0)}$ and
$\mathbf{F'(1)}$ are negative and the corresponding eigenvectors are
positive. Therefore, there exist irreducible constant matrixes
$M^{\pm}=(\alpha_{ij}^{\pm})$ such that 
$\frac{\partial F^i}{\partial u_{j}}(\mathbf{0})< \alpha_{ij}^{-}$ and
$\frac{\partial F^i}{\partial u_{j}}(\mathbf{1})< \alpha_{ij}^{+}$ 
for $i,j=1,2,\dots,n$, and that the principal
eigenvalues of $M^{\pm}$ are negative. Then we can choose positive
vectors
$\mathbf{p}^{\pm}=(p_1^{\pm},p_2^{\pm},\dots,p_n^{\pm})$
and
$p_i^{-}<p_i^{+}$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$, such that
$\mathbf{p}^{\pm}$ are positive eigenvectors corresponding to
the principal eigenvalues of $M^{\pm}$. Define
\[
\nu(s)=\frac{1}{2}\Big(1+\tanh\frac{s}{2}\Big)
\]
and let the positive vector function
$\mathbf{p}(\xi)=(p_1(\xi),p_2(\xi),\dots,p_n(\xi))$
defined by
\[
p_i(\xi)=\nu(\xi)p_i^{+}+(1-\nu(\xi))p_i^{-},\quad i=1,2,\dots,n.
\]
It is easy to check $\mathbf{p}(\xi)$ satisfies the following
conditions:
\begin{gather*}
p_i(\cdot)\in \big[\min\{p_i^{-},p_i^{+}\},\max\{p_i^{-},p_i^{+}\}\big]
=[p_i^{-},p_i^{+}] \quad \text{ on } \mathbb{R},
\\
\min_{1\leq j\leq n}{\inf_{\xi\in \mathbb{R}} p_{j}(\xi)}>0,\quad
 p_i'(\xi)>0,\ \xi\in \mathbb{R},
\\
p_i(\xi)\to p_i^{\pm} \text{ and }
p'_i(\xi)\to 0 \quad \text{as }\xi\to \pm \infty
\text{ for } i=1,2,\dots,n.
\end{gather*}
Thus the needed pair of super- and sub-solution of \eqref{101} can
be constructed in the following lemma (see \cite{Yang0,Yang}).

\begin{lemma} \label{lem2.4}
There exist positive constants $\beta_0,\sigma_0$
and $\tilde{d_0}\in (0,\frac{1}{2})$ such that for any $\delta \in
(0,\tilde{d_0}]$ and every $\xi_0\in \mathbb{R}$, the following
functions $\mathbf{w}^{\pm}$ defined by
\begin{equation}
\mathbf{w}^{\pm}(x,t)=\mathbf{U}(x-ct+
\xi_0\pm\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0t}))\pm\delta
\mathbf{p}(x-ct)e^{-\beta_0t} \label{205}
\end{equation}
are a super-solution and a sub-solution respectively of \eqref{101},
here 
\[
\mathbf{w}^{\pm}=(w_1^{\pm},w_2^{\pm},\dots,w_1^{\pm}).
\]
\end{lemma}

In the sequel, we still keep the notation $\beta_0,\sigma_0,
\tilde{d_0}$ and $\mathbf{p}(\cdot)$.

\section{Monotonicity of traveling waves}

In this section, we establish the monotonicity of a traveling wave
solution $\mathbf{U}(\cdot)$ of \eqref{101}. We show that
$\mathbf{U}(\cdot)$ is strictly monotone in the following
theorem.
\begin{theorem}\label{thm3.1}
 If $\mathbf{u}(x,t)=\mathbf{U}(x-ct)$ is
a traveling wave solution of \eqref{101} satisfying
$\lim_{x\to +\infty}\mathbf{U}(x)=\mathbf{1}$ and
$\lim_{x\to -\infty}\mathbf{U}(x)=\mathbf{0}$ with
$\mathbf{0}\leq \mathbf{U}(\cdot)\leq \mathbf{1}$, then
$\mathbf{U}$ is strictly increasing and
$\mathbf{U}'(x)>\mathbf{0}$ for almost all $x\in \mathbb{R}$.
\end{theorem}

\begin{proof}
As  mentioned before, let
\begin{gather*}
p_{\rm min}=\min\{p_i^{-},p_i^{+}\},\quad \mathbf{p}^{-}=\big(p_1^{-},\dots,
p_i^{-},\dots,p_n^{-}\big),\quad i=1,2,\dots,n,
\\
p_{\rm max}=\max\{p_i^{-},p_i^{+}\},\quad \mathbf{p}^{+}=\big(p_1^{+},\dots,
p_i^{+},\dots,p_n^{+}\big),\quad i=1,2,\dots,n,
\end{gather*}
and let $\beta_0$ be a positive constant satisfying
\begin{equation}
\beta_0\leq \frac{3}{4}\gamma e^{\beta_0\tau}, \label{401}
\end{equation}
where $\gamma>0$. Let $\zeta_0(x)$ be a smooth function such that
\begin{gather*}
\zeta_0(x)=0 \text{ for } x\leq -2, \quad \zeta_0(x)=1 \text{ for } x\geq 2,\\
0\leq \zeta'_0(x)\leq 1\text{ and } |\zeta''_0(x)|\leq 1\text{
for all } x\in \mathbb{R}.
\end{gather*}
Define
\begin{equation}
b_i(x,t)=[\big(1-\zeta_0(x)\big)p_i^{-}+\zeta_0(x)p_i^{+}]e^{-\beta_0t}.
\label{402}
\end{equation}

Then, we divide the proof into three steps.

\noindent\textbf{Step 1.} 
It is obvious that $\mathbf{1}$ and $\mathbf{0}$ are super-solution and
sub-solution of \eqref{101}, respectively. By the comparison
principle, we have
\begin{equation}
\mathbf{0}<\mathbf{U}(x)<\mathbf{1}\label{403}
\end{equation}
for all $x \in \mathbb{R}$.

\noindent\textbf{Step 2.} We claim that, for some $z_{*}$ large enough,
\begin{equation}
\mathbf{0}<\mathbf{U}(x-z)<\mathbf{U}(x) \label{404}
\end{equation}
for all $x \in \mathbb{R}$ and $z\in \mathbb{R}$ with $z\geq z_{*}$.

Let $b_i$ be defined as in \eqref{402} and let
\begin{equation}
v_i^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau)=U_i(x+c\tau)+\alpha b_i(x,t-\tau),\quad i=1,2,\dots,n,
\label{405}
\end{equation}
where the constant $\tau$ is the delay in \eqref{101}. 
If $\tau=0$ in \eqref{405}, then
\[
v_i^{\alpha}(x,t)=U_i(x)+\alpha b_i(x,t),\quad  i=1,2,\dots,n,
\]
where $U_i(\cdot)$ is the traveling wave solutions of \eqref{103}. 
Hence $v_{it}^{\alpha}=\alpha b_{it},\ v_{ix}^{\alpha}
=U_{ix}(x)+\alpha b_{ix},\ v_{ixx}^{\alpha}=U_{ixx}(x)+\alpha b_{ixx}$.

Now, we claim that there exists $\xi_{*}\gg 1$ and $\alpha_{*}>0$ such
that, for all $0<\alpha<\alpha_{*}$,
\begin{equation}
Lv_i^{\alpha}(x,t)=v_{it}^{\alpha}-D_iv_{ixx}^{\alpha}-cv_{ix}^{\alpha}
-F^i\big(v_1^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau),\dots,v_i^{\alpha}(x,t),\dots,
v_n^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau)\big)\geq 0
 \label{406}
\end{equation}
for all $x\in \mathbb{R}$ with $|x|>\xi_{*}$ and all $t\in
\mathbb{R}^{+}$. In fact,
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
Lv_i^{\alpha}(x,t)
&= F^i\big(U_1(x+c\tau),\dots,U_i(x),\dots,
U_n(x+c\tau)\big) \\
&\quad -F^i\big(v_1^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau),\dots,v_i^{\alpha}(x,t),\dots,
v_n^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau)\big) \\
&\quad +\alpha (b_{it}-D_ib_{ixx}-cb_{ix}).
\end{aligned} \label{407}
\end{equation}
Since $\lim_{x\to +\infty}\mathbf{U}(x)=\mathbf{1}$ and
$\lim_{x\to -\infty}\mathbf{U}(x)=\mathbf{0}$, we have
\begin{align*}
&F^i\big(U_1(x+c\tau),\dots,U_i(x),\dots, U_n(x+c\tau)\big)
-F^i\big(v_1^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau),\dots,\\
&v_i^{\alpha}(x,t),\dots,
v_n^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau)\big) \\
&=  F^i\big(U_1(x+c\tau),\dots,U_i(x),\dots,
U_n(x+c\tau)\big) 
 -F^i\Big(U_1(x+c\tau)+\alpha
b_1(x,t-\tau),\dots,\\
&\quad U_i(x)+\alpha b_i(x,t),\dots, U_n(x+c\tau)+\alpha
b_n(x,t-\tau)\Big) \\
&= -\alpha\sum_{1\leq i\neq j\leq n}\frac{\partial F^i}{\partial
u_{j}} \big(U_1(x+c\tau)+\theta_1\alpha
b_1(x,t-\tau),\dots,U_i(x)+\theta_i\alpha
b_i(x,t),\dots, \\
&\quad U_n(x+c\tau)+\theta_n\alpha
b_n(x,t-\tau)\big)\cdot b_{j}(x,t-\tau) \\
&\quad -\alpha\frac{\partial F^i}{\partial u_i}
\big(U_1(x+c\tau)+\theta_1\alpha
b_1(x,t-\tau),\dots,U_i(x)+\theta_i\alpha
b_i(x,t),\dots, \\
&\quad U_n(x+c\tau)+\theta_n\alpha
b_n(x,t-\tau)\big)\cdot b_i(x,t) \\
&\geq -\alpha \sum_{1\leq i\neq j\leq
n}\alpha_{ij}^{\pm}b_{j}(x,t-\tau)-\alpha
\alpha_{ii}^{\pm}b_i(x,t) \\
&\geq -\alpha \sum_{1\leq i\neq j\leq
n}\alpha_{ij}^{\pm}b_{j}(x,t-\tau)-\alpha
\alpha_{ii}^{\pm}b_i(x,t-\tau) \\
&\quad \text{\big(because $\alpha_{ii}^{\pm}\geq 0$ and 
$b_i(x,t)\leq b_i(x,t-\tau)$\big)} \\
&=  -\alpha\sum_{j=1}^n\alpha_{ij}^{\pm}b_{j}(x,t-\tau) \\
&\geq \alpha \gamma b_i(x,t-\tau) \\
&=  \alpha \gamma [\big(1-\zeta_0(x)\big)p_i^{-}+\zeta_0(x)p_i^{+}
 ]e^{-\beta_0(t-\tau)} 
\to \alpha\gamma e^{\beta_0\tau}p_i^{+}e^{-\beta_0t}
%\label{408}
\end{align*}
uniformly in $t$ as $x\to \infty$ and $\alpha\to 0$.
Therefore, there exist $\xi_1>2$ and $\alpha_0>0$ such that
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&F^i\big(U_1(x+c\tau),\dots,U_i(x),\dots,
U_n(x+c\tau)\big)\\
&-F^i\big(v_1^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau),\dots,v_i^{\alpha}(x,t),\dots,
v_n^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau)\big) \\
&> \frac{3}{4}\alpha\gamma e^{\beta_0\tau}p_i^{+}e^{-\beta_0t}
\end{aligned}\label{409}
\end{equation}
for all $t\in \mathbb{R}^{+}$, $x\in \mathbb{R}$ with $x>\xi_1$ and
$0<\alpha<\alpha_0$.

For $x>2$, $b_{ix}=0$ and $b_{ixx}=0$, therefore, from
\eqref{407}-\eqref{409},
\begin{align*}
&Lv_i^{\alpha}(x,t) \\
&= F^i\big(U_1(x+c\tau),\dots,U_i(x),\dots, U_n(x+c\tau)\big)\\
&\quad -F^i\big(v_1^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau),\dots,v_i^{\alpha}(x,t),\dots,
v_n^{\alpha}(x,t-\tau)\big) +\alpha (b_{it}-D_ib_{ixx}-cb_{ix}) \\
&> \frac{3}{4}\alpha\gamma
e^{\beta_0\tau}p_i^{+}e^{-\beta_0t}
+\alpha(-\beta_0)e^{-\beta_0t}p_i^{+} \\
&= \alpha e^{-\beta_0t}p_i^{+}\big(\frac{3}{4}\gamma
e^{\beta_0\tau}-\beta_0\big) 
\geq 0
\end{align*}
(by\ \eqref{401}).
Choose $\alpha_{*}=\alpha_0$ and $\xi_{*}=\xi_1$, then, when
$0<\alpha<\alpha_{*}$ and $x>\xi_{*}$, we have
\[
Lv_i^{\alpha}(x,t)\geq 0.
\]
This proves the claim \eqref{406} for $x$ near $+\infty$.
Similarly we can prove the claim for $x$ near $-\infty$.

We assume that \eqref{406} holds. Since
 $\lim_{x\to +\infty}\mathbf{U}(x)=\mathbf{1}$ and 
$\lim_{x\to -\infty}\mathbf{U}(x)=\mathbf{0}$, there exists $z_{*}>0$ such that
\[
\mathbf{U}(x-z)\leq
\begin{cases}
\mathbf{U}(x), &  x\in [-\xi_{*},\xi_{*}]\\
\mathbf{U}(x)+\alpha_{*}\mathbf{p}^{-}, &  x\bar{\in} [-\xi_{*},\xi_{*}]
\end{cases}
\]
for all $z\in \mathbb{R}$ with $z\geq z_{*}$, where 
$\mathbf{p}^{-}=\big(p_1^{-},\dots, p_i^{-},\dots,p_n^{-}\big)$,
$i=1,2,\dots,n$. We claim that
\eqref{404} holds with this choice of $z_{*}$.
In fact, $v_i^{\alpha_{*}}(x,t)$ in \eqref{405} satisfies
\[
v_i^{\alpha_{*}}(x,t)\geq U_i(x)\geq U_i(x-z)
\]
for all $x \in[-\xi_{*},\xi_{*}]$, $t\in \mathbb{R}$ and
\[
v_i^{\alpha_{*}}(x,0)\geq U_i(x)+\alpha_{*}p_i^{-}\geq U_i(x-z)
\]
for all $x\in \mathbb{R}$. Applying the comparison principle to
$v_i^{\alpha_{*}}(x,t)- U_i(x-z)$, we have
\begin{equation}
U_i(x-z)\leq U_i(x)+\alpha_{*}b_i(x,t) \label{4010}
\end{equation}
for all $x\in \mathbb{R},t\in \mathbb{R}$. Let $t\to +\infty$, we get
\eqref{404}.

\noindent\textbf{Step 3.} We prove that \eqref{404} holds for all 
$z\geq 0$. Let
\begin{equation}
z_0=\inf\{\tilde{z}\geq 0: U_i(x-z)\leq U_i(x),\;
\forall z\geq \tilde{z},\; x\in \mathbb{R}\},  \label{4011}
\end{equation}
we prove that
\begin{equation}
U_i(x-z_0)=U_i(x)
 \label{4012}
\end{equation}
for all $x\in \mathbb{R}$.
Otherwise, by the comparison principle we have
\begin{equation}
U_i(x-z_0)<U_i(x)  \label{4013}
\end{equation}
for all $x\in \mathbb{R}$. There exists $\varepsilon_{*}$ such that
\[
\mathbf{U}(x-z)\leq
\begin{cases}
\mathbf{U}(x),& \text{for }  x\in [-\xi_{*},\xi_{*}]\\
\mathbf{U}(x)+\alpha_{*}\mathbf{p}^{-},
&\text{for } x\bar{\in} [-\xi_{*},\xi_{*}]
\end{cases}
\]
for all $z\in \mathbb{R}$ and $z\geq z_0-\varepsilon_{*}$. By a
similar argument to that in \textbf{Step 2}, one can show that
\eqref{404} holds for all $z\geq z_0-\varepsilon_{*}$, which
contradicts the choice of $z_0$.

Since $\lim_{x\to +\infty}\mathbf{U}(x)=\mathbf{1}$ and
$\lim_{x\to -\infty}\mathbf{U}(x)=\mathbf{0}$, we deduce
from \eqref{4012} that $z_0=0$. Therefore, \eqref{404} holds for
all $z\geq 0$. Hence $\mathbf{U}'(x)\geq \mathbf{0}$ for almost
all $x\in \mathbb{R}$. By the comparison principle, we have
$\mathbf{U}'(x)>\mathbf{0}$ for almost all $x\in \mathbb{R}$.
\end{proof}

\section{Liapunov stability and uniqueness of traveling waves}

In this section, based on the monotonicity result obtained in Section 3 and on
the globally asymptotic exponential stability with phase shift of
monotone traveling wave solutions of \eqref{101} in \cite{Yang}, we 
establish the Liapunov stability and uniqueness up to translation 
of traveling wave solutions combining suitably constructed super-sub 
solutions comparison and a moving plane method.

\begin{theorem}[\cite{Yang}]\label{thm4.1}
Suppose {\rm (H1)--(H3)} hold and \eqref{101} has a
monotone traveling wave solution
$\mathbf{U}(x-ct)=(U_1(x-ct),U_2(x-ct),\dots,U_n(x-ct))$.
Let $\mathbf{u}=(u_1,u_2,\dots,u_n)$ be the solution of
\eqref{101} with the initial data
$\mathbf{u}(x,s)=\mathbf{u}_0(x,s)$, $x\in \mathbb{R}$,
$s\in[-\tau,0]$. For any $u_{0,i}\in [0,1]_C$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$ and 
$\mathbf{u}_0=(u_{0,i})_{i=1}^n$, if
\[
\varepsilon(\mathbf{u}_0(x,s)) :=\sup\big\{\limsup_{x\to
-\infty}\|\mathbf{u}_0(x,s)-\mathbf{0}\|,
\limsup_{x\to
+\infty}\|\mathbf{u}_0(x,s)-\mathbf{1}\|\big\},\quad s\in
[-\tau,0]
\]
is small enough, then
$\mathbf{U}(x-ct)$ is globally exponential stable with phase in
the sense that there exists a positive constant $k>0$ such that the
solution $\mathbf{u}(x,t,\mathbf{u}_0)$ of \eqref{101}
satisfies
\[
|u_i(x,t,\mathbf{u}_0)-U_i(x-ct+\xi)|\leq Ke^{-kt},\ \ \
\ x\in \mathbb{R},\ t\geq 0,
\]
for some $K=K(\mathbf{u}_0)$ and $\xi=\xi(\mathbf{u}_0)$.
\end{theorem}

As a direct consequence of Theorem 4.1, we have the other main result 
in this paper.

\begin{theorem} \label{thm4.2} 
Every monotone traveling wave solution of \eqref{101}
is Liapunov stable. If \eqref{101} has a monotone traveling wave
solution
$\mathbf{U}(x-ct)=(U_1(x-ct),U_2(x-ct),\dots,U_n(x-ct))$,
then the traveling wave solutions of \eqref{101} are unique up to a
translation in the sense that for any traveling wave solution
$\bar{\mathbf{U}}(x-\bar{c}t)
=(\bar{U}_1(x-\bar{c}t),\bar{U}_2(x-\bar{c}t),
\dots,\bar{U}_n(x-\bar{c}t))$, with 
$0\leq \bar{U}_i(\xi)\leq 1, \xi\in \mathbb{R}, i=1,2,\dots,n$, we have
$\bar{c}=c$ and $\bar{U}_i(\cdot)=U_i(\xi_0+\cdot)$ for some
$\xi_0=\xi_0(\bar{\mathbf{U}})\in \mathbb{R}, i=1,2,\dots,n$.
\end{theorem}

\begin{proof}
Let $\mathbf{U}(x-ct)=(U_1(x-ct),U_2(x-ct),\dots,U_n(x-ct))$
be a monotone traveling wave solutions of \eqref{101}. By the
uniform continuity of $U_i(\cdot)$ on $\mathbb{R}$, it follows that for any
$\varepsilon>0$, there exists a
$\delta_3=\delta_3(\varepsilon)>0$ such that for all 
$|y|\leq \delta_3$, there is
\begin{equation}
|U_i(x-ct+y)-U_i(x-ct)|<\frac{\varepsilon}{2},\quad
 x\in \mathbb{R},\; t\geq 0. \label{501}
\end{equation}
We then choose a $\delta=\delta(\varepsilon)>0$ such that
$\delta<\min\{\frac{\varepsilon}{2p_i^{+}},
\frac{\delta_3e^{-\beta_0\tau}}{\sigma_0},\tilde{d}_0\}$,
where $\beta_0$, $\sigma_0$ and $\tilde{d}_0$ are as in Lemma
\ref{lem2.4}. For any $\mathbf{u}_0\in C([-\tau,0],X)$ with
$|u_{0,i}(x,s)-U_i(x-cs)|<\delta$ for $s\in [-\tau,0]$ and $x\in \mathbb{R}$,
$i=1,2,\dots,n$, we have
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
& U_i(x-cs+\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{\beta_0\tau})
-\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0s}))-\delta p_i(x-cs)e^{-\beta_0s} \\
&\leq u_{0,i}(x,s) \\
&\leq U_i(x-cs+\sigma_0\delta(e^{\beta_0\tau}-1)
+\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0s}))+\delta
p_i(x-cs)e^{-\beta_0s}
\end{aligned}\label{502}
\end{equation}
By Lemma \ref{lem2.4} and Theorem \ref{thm2.3}, it follows that
\begin{align*}
& U_i(x-ct+\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{\beta_0\tau})
-\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0t}))-\delta p_i(x-ct)e^{-\beta_0t} \\
&\leq u_i(x,t,\mathbf{u}_0) \\
&\leq U_i(x-ct+\sigma_0\delta(e^{\beta_0\tau}-1)
+\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0t}))+\delta
p_i(x-ct)e^{-\beta_0t}
\end{align*}
for $x\in \mathbb{R}$, $t\geq 0$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$. By the fact that
$p_i(\cdot)\in [p_i^{-},p_i^{+}]$ on $\mathbb{R}$, we have
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&U_i(x-ct+\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{\beta_0\tau})
-\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0t}))-\delta p_i^{+}e^{-\beta_0t} \\
&\leq u_i(x,t,\mathbf{u}_0) \\
&\leq U_i(x-ct+\sigma_0\delta(e^{\beta_0\tau}-1)
+\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0t}))+\delta
p_i^{+}e^{-\beta_0t}.
\end{aligned} \label{503}
\end{equation}
By the choice of $\delta=\delta(\varepsilon)$, we have that for all
$t\geq 0$,
\begin{align*}
|\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{\beta_0\tau})
-\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0t})|
&\leq \sigma_0\delta(e^{\beta_0\tau}-1)+\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0t}) \\
&\leq \sigma_0\delta e^{\beta_0\tau}<\delta_3(\varepsilon),
\end{align*}
and
\begin{align*}
|\sigma_0\delta(e^{\beta_0\tau}-1)
+\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0t})|
&\leq \sigma_0\delta(e^{\beta_0\tau}-1)+\sigma_0\delta(1-e^{-\beta_0t}) \\
&\leq \sigma_0\delta e^{\beta_0\tau}<\delta_3(\varepsilon).
\end{align*}
Then by \eqref{501} and \eqref{503}, it follows that
$U_i(x-ct)-\varepsilon\leq u_i(x,t,\mathbf{u}_0)\leq
U_i(x-ct)+\varepsilon$, for $x\in \mathbb{R}$, $t\geq 0$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$.
That is to say, $|u_i(x,t,\mathbf{u}_0)-U_i(x-ct)|<\varepsilon$,
for $x\in \mathbb{R}$, $t\geq 0$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$. Therefore,
$U_i(x-ct)$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$. is Liapunov stable;
 i.e. $\mathbf{U}(x-ct)$ is Liapunov stable.

We are ready to prove the uniqueness of traveling wave
solutions. Let
$\mathbf{U}(x-ct)=(U_1(x-ct),U_2(x-ct),\dots,U_n(x-ct))$,
be the given monotone traveling wave solution of \eqref{101}, and
let
$\bar{\mathbf{U}}(x-\bar{c}t)=(\bar{U}_1(x-\bar{c}t),\bar{U}_2(x-\bar{c}t),
\dots,\bar{U}_n(x-\bar{c}t))$, with
 $0\leq \bar{U}_i(\xi)\leq 1$, $\xi\in \mathbb{R}$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$, 
be any traveling wave solution of
\eqref{101} with $0\leq \bar{U}_i\leq 1$ on $\mathbb{R}$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$.
Since $\lim_{x\to \infty}\bar{U}_i(x-\bar{c}s)=1$ and
 $\lim_{x\to -\infty}\bar{U}_i(x-\bar{c}s)=0$ uniformly
 for $s\in [-\tau,0]$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$, thus there exists
\begin{equation}
\varepsilon(\bar{U}_i(x,s)) 
:=\sup\big\{\limsup_{x\to -\infty}\|\bar{U}_i(x-\bar{c}s)-0\|,
\limsup_{x\to +\infty}\|\bar{U}_i(x-\bar{c}s)-1\|\Big\},\quad s\in [-\tau,0]
\label{504}
\end{equation}
is small enough.
Then, by Theorem \ref{thm4.1}, there exist
$\bar{K}=\bar{K}(\bar{\mathbf{U}})>0$, and
$\xi_0=\xi_0(\bar{\mathbf{U}})\in \mathbb{R}$ such that
\begin{equation}
|\bar{U}_i(x-\bar{c}t)-U_i(x-ct+\xi_0)|\leq \bar{K}e^{-kt},\quad
x\in \mathbb{R},\; t\geq 0,\; i=1,2,\dots,n.
\label{505}
\end{equation}
Let $\bar{\xi}\in \mathbb{R}$ such that $0<\bar{U}_i(\bar{\xi})<1$, and
define $L(\bar{\xi}):=\{(x,t)|x\in \mathbb{R},\; t\geq 0,\;
x-\bar{c}t=\bar{\xi}\}$. Then, by \eqref{505}, we have
\begin{equation}
U_i(\bar{\xi}+\xi_0+(\bar{c}-c)t)-\bar{K}e^{-kt}\leq
\bar{U}_i(\bar{\xi})\leq U_i(\bar{\xi}+\xi_0+(\bar{c}-c)t)+\bar{K}e^{-kt},
 \label{506}
\end{equation}
for all $(x,t)\in L(\bar{\xi})$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$. Since
$U_i(+\infty)=1$ and $U_i(-\infty)=0$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$, letting
$t\to \infty$ in \eqref{506}, we obtain that $\bar{c}\leq c$
from the left inequality and that $\bar{c}\geq c$ from the right
inequality. Therefore $\bar{c}=c$. For any $\xi\in \mathbb{R}$, again by
\eqref{505}, we then have
\begin{equation}
|\bar{U}_i(\xi)-U_i(\xi+\xi_0)|\leq \bar{K}e^{-kt} \label{507}
\end{equation}
for all $(x,t)\in L(\bar{\xi})$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$. Naturally, letting
$t\to \infty$ in \eqref{507}, we get
$\bar{U}_i(\xi)=U_i(\xi+\xi_0)$ for all $\xi\in \mathbb{R}$, $i=1,2,\dots,n$. 
That is $\bar{U}_i(\cdot)=U_i(\xi_0+\cdot),\  i=1,2,\dots,n$.
Therefore, the traveling wave solutions of \eqref{101} are unique up
to a translation.
This completes the proof.
\end{proof}

\section{Applications}


As an application, we consider the epidemic model with delay
\begin{equation}
\begin{gathered}
\frac{\partial}{\partial t}u_1(t,x)=d\frac{\partial^2}{\partial
x^2}u_1(t,x)
-a_{11}u_1(t,x)+a_{12}u_2(t-\tau,x), \\
\frac{\partial}{\partial
t}u_2(t,x)=\tilde{d}\frac{\partial^2}{\partial
x^2}u_2(t,x)-a_{22}u_2(t,x)+g(u_1(t-\tau,x)),
\end{gathered} \label{601}
\end{equation}
where  $g$ satisfies the following conditions:
\begin{itemize}
\item[(A1)] $g\in C^2(I)$, where $I$ is an open interval in 
 $\mathbb{R}$. $g(0)=0$, $g'(0)\geq 0$, $g'(z)>0$,
for all $z>0$, $\lim_{z\to \infty}g(z)=1$, and there exists a
$\varsigma>0$ such that $g''(z)>0$ for $z\in(0,\varsigma)$ and $ g''(z)<0$
for $z>\varsigma$.

\item[(A2)] $g'(0)<\gamma_1=\frac{a_{11}a_{22}}{a_{12}}<\gamma_1^{*}$,
where the equation  $g(z)=\gamma_1z$ has one and only one root when 
 $\gamma_1=\gamma_1^{*}$.
\end{itemize}

Obviously, system \eqref{601} has three non-negative equilibria 
 $E^{-}=(0,0)$, $E^{0}=(a,\frac{a_{11}a}{a_{12}})$ and 
$E^{+}=(e_1^{+},e_2^{+})=(b,\frac{a_{11}b}{a_{12}})$, 
($E^{+}$ may not be the point $(1,1)$), where $a$ and $b$ satisfy  $0<a<b$
 are the two positive roots of the equation
$g(x)=\frac{a_{11}a_{22}}{a_{12}}x$. In this case, 
$E^{0}$ is a saddle point, $E^{-}$ and $E^{+}$ are both stable nodes. 
Therefore we investigate the bistable waves, see \cite{Xu}.

Moreover, it is easy to verify  assumptions (H1)--(H3) hold. 
As a result, we obtain the following theorems.

\begin{theorem}[Stability] \label{thm5.1} Suppose
 {\rm (A1)--(A2)} hold and \eqref{601} has a monotone traveling wave solution
$\mathbf{U}(x-ct)=(U_1(x-ct),U_2(x-ct))$.
Let $\mathbf{u}=(u_1,u_2)$ be the solution of
\eqref{601} with the initial data
$\mathbf{u}(x,s)=\mathbf{u}_0(x,s)$, $x\in \mathbb{R}$,
$s\in[-\tau,0]$. For any $u_{0,i}\in [0,1]_C$, $i=1,2$ and 
$u_0=(u_{0,i})_{i=1}^n$, if
\[
\varepsilon(\mathbf{u}_0(x,s)) :=\sup\big\{\limsup_{x\to
-\infty}\|\mathbf{u}_0(x,s)-E^{-}\|,
\limsup_{x\to
+\infty}\|\mathbf{u}_0(x,s)-E^{+}\|\big\},\quad s\in [-\tau,0]
\]
is small enough, then $\mathbf{U}(x-ct)$ is globally exponential stable in
the sense that there exists a positive constant $k>0$ such that the
solution $\mathbf{u}(x,t,\mathbf{u}_0)$ of \eqref{601}
satisfies
\[
|u_i(x,t,\mathbf{u}_0)-U_i(x-ct+\xi)|\leq Ke^{-kt},\quad
 x\in \mathbb{R},\; t\geq 0,\; i=1,2
\]
for some $K=K(\mathbf{u}_0)$ and $\xi=\xi(\mathbf{u}_0)$.
\end{theorem}

\begin{theorem}[Monotonicity] \label{thm5.2}
 If\ $\mathbf{u}(x,t)=\mathbf{U}(x-ct)=(U_1(\xi),U_2(\xi))$ is
a traveling wave solution of \eqref{601} satisfying
$\lim_{\xi\to +\infty}\mathbf{U}(\xi)=E^{+}$ and
$\lim_{\xi\to -\infty}\mathbf{U}(\xi)=E^{-}$ with
$E^{-}\leq \mathbf{U}(\cdot)\leq E^{+}$, then
$\mathbf{U}$ is strictly increasing and
$\mathbf{U}'(\xi)>0$ for almost all $\xi\in \mathbb{R}$.
\end{theorem}

Next we have Liapunov stability and uniqueness.

\begin{theorem} \label{thm5.3} 
Every monotone traveling wave solution of \eqref{601}
is Liapunov stable. If \eqref{601} has a monotone traveling wave
solution
$\mathbf{U}(x-ct)=(U_1(x-ct),U_2(x-ct))$,
then the traveling wave solutions of \eqref{101} are unique up to a
translation in the sense that for any traveling wave solution
$\bar{\mathbf{U}}(x-\bar{c}t)=(\bar{U}_1(x-\bar{c}t),\bar{U}_2(x-\bar{c}t))$, 
with $0\leq \bar{U}_i(\xi)\leq 1, \xi\in \mathbb{R},\ i=1,2$, we have 
$\bar{c}=c$ and $\bar{U}_i(\cdot)=U_i(\xi_0+\cdot)$ for some
$\xi_0=\xi_0(\bar{\mathbf{U}})\in \mathbb{R}$, $i=1,2$.
\end{theorem}

\subsection*{Acknowledgments}
Yun-Rui Yang was supported by the NSF of China (11301241) and 
Institutions of higher learning scientific research project of Gansu 
Province of China (2013A-044). Yun-Rui Yang was also supported by grant 
2011029 from the Young Scientists Foundation at the Lanzhou Jiaotong 
University of China. This author also wants to thank the work unit 
for her training and support at Lanzhou Jiaotong University, where young 
teachers are encouraged to do scientific research.

 Nai-Wei Liu was Supported by NSF of China (11201402). 

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