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Bifurcation theory

Bifurcation theory is the mathematical study of changes in the qualitative or topological structure of a given family of curves, such as the integral curves of a family of vector fields, and the solutions of a family of differential equations. Most commonly applied to the mathematical study of dynamical systems, a bifurcation occurs when a small smooth change made to the parameter values (the bifurcation parameters) of a system causes a sudden 'qualitative' or topological change in its behavior.[1] Bifurcations occur in both continuous systems (described by ordinary, delay or partial differential equations) and discrete systems (described by maps).

Phase portrait showing saddle-node bifurcation

The name "bifurcation" was first introduced by Henri Poincaré in 1885 in the first paper in mathematics showing such a behavior.[2]

Bifurcation types edit

It is useful to divide bifurcations into two principal classes:

  • Local bifurcations, which can be analysed entirely through changes in the local stability properties of equilibria, periodic orbits or other invariant sets as parameters cross through critical thresholds; and
  • Global bifurcations, which often occur when larger invariant sets of the system 'collide' with each other, or with equilibria of the system. They cannot be detected purely by a stability analysis of the equilibria (fixed points).

Local bifurcations edit

 
Period-halving bifurcations (L) leading to order, followed by period doubling bifurcations (R) leading to chaos.

A local bifurcation occurs when a parameter change causes the stability of an equilibrium (or fixed point) to change. In continuous systems, this corresponds to the real part of an eigenvalue of an equilibrium passing through zero. In discrete systems (described by maps), this corresponds to a fixed point having a Floquet multiplier with modulus equal to one. In both cases, the equilibrium is non-hyperbolic at the bifurcation point. The topological changes in the phase portrait of the system can be confined to arbitrarily small neighbourhoods of the bifurcating fixed points by moving the bifurcation parameter close to the bifurcation point (hence 'local').

More technically, consider the continuous dynamical system described by the ordinary differential equation (ODE)

 

A local bifurcation occurs at   if the Jacobian matrix   has an eigenvalue with zero real part. If the eigenvalue is equal to zero, the bifurcation is a steady state bifurcation, but if the eigenvalue is non-zero but purely imaginary, this is a Hopf bifurcation.

For discrete dynamical systems, consider the system

 

Then a local bifurcation occurs at   if the matrix   has an eigenvalue with modulus equal to one. If the eigenvalue is equal to one, the bifurcation is either a saddle-node (often called fold bifurcation in maps), transcritical or pitchfork bifurcation. If the eigenvalue is equal to −1, it is a period-doubling (or flip) bifurcation, and otherwise, it is a Hopf bifurcation.

Examples of local bifurcations include:

Global bifurcations edit

 
A phase portrait before, at, and after a homoclinic bifurcation in 2D. The periodic orbit grows until it collides with the saddle point. At the bifurcation point the period of the periodic orbit has grown to infinity and it has become a homoclinic orbit. After the bifurcation there is no longer a periodic orbit. Left panel: For small parameter values, there is a saddle point at the origin and a limit cycle in the first quadrant. Middle panel: As the bifurcation parameter increases, the limit cycle grows until it exactly intersects the saddle point, yielding an orbit of infinite duration. Right panel: When the bifurcation parameter increases further, the limit cycle disappears completely.

Global bifurcations occur when 'larger' invariant sets, such as periodic orbits, collide with equilibria. This causes changes in the topology of the trajectories in the phase space which cannot be confined to a small neighbourhood, as is the case with local bifurcations. In fact, the changes in topology extend out to an arbitrarily large distance (hence 'global').

Examples of global bifurcations include:

  • Homoclinic bifurcation in which a limit cycle collides with a saddle point.[3] Homoclinic bifurcations can occur supercritically or subcritically. The variant above is the "small" or "type I" homoclinic bifurcation. In 2D there is also the "big" or "type II" homoclinic bifurcation in which the homoclinic orbit "traps" the other ends of the unstable and stable manifolds of the saddle. In three or more dimensions, higher codimension bifurcations can occur, producing complicated, possibly chaotic dynamics.
  • Heteroclinic bifurcation in which a limit cycle collides with two or more saddle points; they involve a heteroclinic cycle.[4] Heteroclinic bifurcations are of two types: resonance bifurcations and transverse bifurcations. Both types of bifurcation will result in the change of stability of the heteroclinic cycle. At a resonance bifurcation, the stability of the cycle changes when an algebraic condition on the eigenvalues of the equilibria in the cycle is satisfied. This is usually accompanied by the birth or death of a periodic orbit. A transverse bifurcation of a heteroclinic cycle is caused when the real part of a transverse eigenvalue of one of the equilibria in the cycle passes through zero. This will also cause a change in stability of the heteroclinic cycle.
  • Infinite-period bifurcation in which a stable node and saddle point simultaneously occur on a limit cycle.[5] As the limit of a parameter approaches a certain critical value, the speed of the oscillation slows down and the period approaches infinity. The infinite-period bifurcation occurs at this critical value. Beyond the critical value, the two fixed points emerge continuously from each other on the limit cycle to disrupt the oscillation and form two saddle points.
  • Blue sky catastrophe in which a limit cycle collides with a nonhyperbolic cycle.

Global bifurcations can also involve more complicated sets such as chaotic attractors (e.g. crises).


Codimension of a bifurcation edit

The codimension of a bifurcation is the number of parameters which must be varied for the bifurcation to occur. This corresponds to the codimension of the parameter set for which the bifurcation occurs within the full space of parameters. Saddle-node bifurcations and Hopf bifurcations are the only generic local bifurcations which are really codimension-one (the others all having higher codimension). However, transcritical and pitchfork bifurcations are also often thought of as codimension-one, because the normal forms can be written with only one parameter.

An example of a well-studied codimension-two bifurcation is the Bogdanov–Takens bifurcation.

Applications in semiclassical and quantum physics edit

Bifurcation theory has been applied to connect quantum systems to the dynamics of their classical analogues in atomic systems,[6][7][8] molecular systems,[9] and resonant tunneling diodes.[10] Bifurcation theory has also been applied to the study of laser dynamics[11] and a number of theoretical examples which are difficult to access experimentally such as the kicked top[12] and coupled quantum wells.[13] The dominant reason for the link between quantum systems and bifurcations in the classical equations of motion is that at bifurcations, the signature of classical orbits becomes large, as Martin Gutzwiller points out in his classic[14] work on quantum chaos.[15] Many kinds of bifurcations have been studied with regard to links between classical and quantum dynamics including saddle node bifurcations, Hopf bifurcations, umbilic bifurcations, period doubling bifurcations, reconnection bifurcations, tangent bifurcations, and cusp bifurcations.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Blanchard, P.; Devaney, R. L.; Hall, G. R. (2006). Differential Equations. London: Thompson. pp. 96–111. ISBN 978-0-495-01265-8.
  2. ^ Henri Poincaré. "L'Équilibre d'une masse fluide animée d'un mouvement de rotation". Acta Mathematica, vol.7, pp. 259-380, Sept 1885.
  3. ^ Strogatz, Steven H. (1994). Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos. Addison-Wesley. p. 262. ISBN 0-201-54344-3.
  4. ^ Luo, Dingjun (1997). Bifurcation Theory and Methods of Dynamical Systems. World Scientific. p. 26. ISBN 981-02-2094-4.
  5. ^ James P. Keener, "Infinite Period Bifurcation and Global Bifurcation Branches", SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics, Vol. 41, No. 1 (August, 1981), pp. 127–144.
  6. ^ Gao, J.; Delos, J. B. (1997). "Quantum manifestations of bifurcations of closed orbits in the photoabsorption spectra of atoms in electric fields". Phys. Rev. A. 56 (1): 356–364. Bibcode:1997PhRvA..56..356G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.56.356. S2CID 120255640.
  7. ^ Peters, A. D.; Jaffé, C.; Delos, J. B. (1994). "Quantum Manifestations of Bifurcations of Classical Orbits: An Exactly Solvable Model". Phys. Rev. Lett. 73 (21): 2825–2828. Bibcode:1994PhRvL..73.2825P. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.73.2825. PMID 10057205. S2CID 1641622.
  8. ^ Courtney, Michael; Jiao, Hong; Spellmeyer, Neal; Kleppner, Daniel; Gao, J.; Delos, J. B.; et al. (1995). "Closed Orbit Bifurcations in Continuum Stark Spectra". Phys. Rev. Lett. 74 (9): 1538–1541. Bibcode:1995PhRvL..74.1538C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.74.1538. PMID 10059054. S2CID 21573702.
  9. ^ Founargiotakis, M.; Farantos, S. C.; Skokos, Ch.; Contopoulos, G. (1997). "Bifurcation diagrams of periodic orbits for unbound molecular systems: FH2". Chemical Physics Letters. 277 (5–6): 456–464. Bibcode:1997CPL...277..456F. doi:10.1016/S0009-2614(97)00931-7.
  10. ^ Monteiro, T. S. & Saraga, D. S. (2001). "Quantum Wells in Tilted Fields:Semiclassical Amplitudes and Phase Coherence Times". Foundations of Physics. 31 (2): 355–370. doi:10.1023/A:1017546721313. S2CID 120968155.
  11. ^ Wieczorek, S.; Krauskopf, B.; Simpson, T. B. & Lenstra, D. (2005). "The dynamical complexity of optically injected semiconductor lasers". Physics Reports. 416 (1–2): 1–128. Bibcode:2005PhR...416....1W. doi:10.1016/j.physrep.2005.06.003.
  12. ^ Stamatiou, G. & Ghikas, D. P. K. (2007). "Quantum entanglement dependence on bifurcations and scars in non-autonomous systems. The case of quantum kicked top". Physics Letters A. 368 (3–4): 206–214. arXiv:quant-ph/0702172. Bibcode:2007PhLA..368..206S. doi:10.1016/j.physleta.2007.04.003. S2CID 15562617.
  13. ^ Galan, J.; Freire, E. (1999). "Chaos in a Mean Field Model of Coupled Quantum Wells; Bifurcations of Periodic Orbits in a Symmetric Hamiltonian System". Reports on Mathematical Physics. 44 (1–2): 87–94. Bibcode:1999RpMP...44...87G. doi:10.1016/S0034-4877(99)80148-7.
  14. ^ Kleppner, D.; Delos, J. B. (2001). "Beyond quantum mechanics: Insights from the work of Martin Gutzwiller". Foundations of Physics. 31 (4): 593–612. doi:10.1023/A:1017512925106. S2CID 116944147.
  15. ^ Gutzwiller, Martin C. (1990). Chaos in Classical and Quantum Mechanics. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-97173-5.

References edit

  • Afrajmovich, V. S.; Arnold, V. I.; et al. (1994). Bifurcation Theory and Catastrophe Theory. ISBN 978-3-540-65379-0.
  • Guardia, M.; Martinez-Seara, M.; Teixeira, M. A. (2011). Generic bifurcations of low codimension of planar Filippov Systems. "Journal of differential equations", Febrer 2011, vol. 250, núm. 4, pp. 1967–2023. DOI:10.1016/j.jde.2010.11.016
  • Wiggins, Stephen (1988). Global bifurcations and Chaos: Analytical Methods. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-96775-2.

External links edit

  • by Elmer G. Wiens
  • Introduction to Bifurcation theory by John David Crawford

bifurcation, theory, mathematical, study, changes, qualitative, topological, structure, given, family, curves, such, integral, curves, family, vector, fields, solutions, family, differential, equations, most, commonly, applied, mathematical, study, dynamical, . Bifurcation theory is the mathematical study of changes in the qualitative or topological structure of a given family of curves such as the integral curves of a family of vector fields and the solutions of a family of differential equations Most commonly applied to the mathematical study of dynamical systems a bifurcation occurs when a small smooth change made to the parameter values the bifurcation parameters of a system causes a sudden qualitative or topological change in its behavior 1 Bifurcations occur in both continuous systems described by ordinary delay or partial differential equations and discrete systems described by maps Phase portrait showing saddle node bifurcationThe name bifurcation was first introduced by Henri Poincare in 1885 in the first paper in mathematics showing such a behavior 2 Contents 1 Bifurcation types 1 1 Local bifurcations 1 2 Global bifurcations 2 Codimension of a bifurcation 3 Applications in semiclassical and quantum physics 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBifurcation types editIt is useful to divide bifurcations into two principal classes Local bifurcations which can be analysed entirely through changes in the local stability properties of equilibria periodic orbits or other invariant sets as parameters cross through critical thresholds and Global bifurcations which often occur when larger invariant sets of the system collide with each other or with equilibria of the system They cannot be detected purely by a stability analysis of the equilibria fixed points Local bifurcations edit nbsp Period halving bifurcations L leading to order followed by period doubling bifurcations R leading to chaos A local bifurcation occurs when a parameter change causes the stability of an equilibrium or fixed point to change In continuous systems this corresponds to the real part of an eigenvalue of an equilibrium passing through zero In discrete systems described by maps this corresponds to a fixed point having a Floquet multiplier with modulus equal to one In both cases the equilibrium is non hyperbolic at the bifurcation point The topological changes in the phase portrait of the system can be confined to arbitrarily small neighbourhoods of the bifurcating fixed points by moving the bifurcation parameter close to the bifurcation point hence local More technically consider the continuous dynamical system described by the ordinary differential equation ODE x f x l f R n R R n displaystyle dot x f x lambda quad f colon mathbb R n times mathbb R rightarrow mathbb R n nbsp A local bifurcation occurs at x 0 l 0 displaystyle x 0 lambda 0 nbsp if the Jacobian matrix d f x 0 l 0 displaystyle textrm d f x 0 lambda 0 nbsp has an eigenvalue with zero real part If the eigenvalue is equal to zero the bifurcation is a steady state bifurcation but if the eigenvalue is non zero but purely imaginary this is a Hopf bifurcation For discrete dynamical systems consider the system x n 1 f x n l displaystyle x n 1 f x n lambda nbsp Then a local bifurcation occurs at x 0 l 0 displaystyle x 0 lambda 0 nbsp if the matrix d f x 0 l 0 displaystyle textrm d f x 0 lambda 0 nbsp has an eigenvalue with modulus equal to one If the eigenvalue is equal to one the bifurcation is either a saddle node often called fold bifurcation in maps transcritical or pitchfork bifurcation If the eigenvalue is equal to 1 it is a period doubling or flip bifurcation and otherwise it is a Hopf bifurcation Examples of local bifurcations include Saddle node fold bifurcation Transcritical bifurcation Pitchfork bifurcation Period doubling flip bifurcation Hopf bifurcation Neimark Sacker secondary Hopf bifurcationGlobal bifurcations edit nbsp A phase portrait before at and after a homoclinic bifurcation in 2D The periodic orbit grows until it collides with the saddle point At the bifurcation point the period of the periodic orbit has grown to infinity and it has become a homoclinic orbit After the bifurcation there is no longer a periodic orbit Left panel For small parameter values there is a saddle point at the origin and a limit cycle in the first quadrant Middle panel As the bifurcation parameter increases the limit cycle grows until it exactly intersects the saddle point yielding an orbit of infinite duration Right panel When the bifurcation parameter increases further the limit cycle disappears completely Global bifurcations occur when larger invariant sets such as periodic orbits collide with equilibria This causes changes in the topology of the trajectories in the phase space which cannot be confined to a small neighbourhood as is the case with local bifurcations In fact the changes in topology extend out to an arbitrarily large distance hence global Examples of global bifurcations include Homoclinic bifurcation in which a limit cycle collides with a saddle point 3 Homoclinic bifurcations can occur supercritically or subcritically The variant above is the small or type I homoclinic bifurcation In 2D there is also the big or type II homoclinic bifurcation in which the homoclinic orbit traps the other ends of the unstable and stable manifolds of the saddle In three or more dimensions higher codimension bifurcations can occur producing complicated possibly chaotic dynamics Heteroclinic bifurcation in which a limit cycle collides with two or more saddle points they involve a heteroclinic cycle 4 Heteroclinic bifurcations are of two types resonance bifurcations and transverse bifurcations Both types of bifurcation will result in the change of stability of the heteroclinic cycle At a resonance bifurcation the stability of the cycle changes when an algebraic condition on the eigenvalues of the equilibria in the cycle is satisfied This is usually accompanied by the birth or death of a periodic orbit A transverse bifurcation of a heteroclinic cycle is caused when the real part of a transverse eigenvalue of one of the equilibria in the cycle passes through zero This will also cause a change in stability of the heteroclinic cycle Infinite period bifurcation in which a stable node and saddle point simultaneously occur on a limit cycle 5 As the limit of a parameter approaches a certain critical value the speed of the oscillation slows down and the period approaches infinity The infinite period bifurcation occurs at this critical value Beyond the critical value the two fixed points emerge continuously from each other on the limit cycle to disrupt the oscillation and form two saddle points Blue sky catastrophe in which a limit cycle collides with a nonhyperbolic cycle Global bifurcations can also involve more complicated sets such as chaotic attractors e g crises Examples of bifurcations nbsp A Hopf bifurcation occurs in the system d x d t m x y x 2 displaystyle frac dx dt mu x y x 2 nbsp and d y d t x m y 2 x 2 displaystyle frac dy dt x mu y 2x 2 nbsp when m 0 displaystyle mu 0 nbsp around the origin A homoclinic bifurcation occurs around m 0 06605695 displaystyle mu 0 06605695 nbsp nbsp A detailed view of the homoclinic bifurcation nbsp As m displaystyle mu nbsp increases from zero a stable limit cycle emerges out of the origin via Hopf bifurcation Here we plot the limit cycle parametrically up to order m 3 2 displaystyle mu 3 2 nbsp The exact computation is explained on the Hopf bifurcation page Codimension of a bifurcation editThe codimension of a bifurcation is the number of parameters which must be varied for the bifurcation to occur This corresponds to the codimension of the parameter set for which the bifurcation occurs within the full space of parameters Saddle node bifurcations and Hopf bifurcations are the only generic local bifurcations which are really codimension one the others all having higher codimension However transcritical and pitchfork bifurcations are also often thought of as codimension one because the normal forms can be written with only one parameter An example of a well studied codimension two bifurcation is the Bogdanov Takens bifurcation Applications in semiclassical and quantum physics editBifurcation theory has been applied to connect quantum systems to the dynamics of their classical analogues in atomic systems 6 7 8 molecular systems 9 and resonant tunneling diodes 10 Bifurcation theory has also been applied to the study of laser dynamics 11 and a number of theoretical examples which are difficult to access experimentally such as the kicked top 12 and coupled quantum wells 13 The dominant reason for the link between quantum systems and bifurcations in the classical equations of motion is that at bifurcations the signature of classical orbits becomes large as Martin Gutzwiller points out in his classic 14 work on quantum chaos 15 Many kinds of bifurcations have been studied with regard to links between classical and quantum dynamics including saddle node bifurcations Hopf bifurcations umbilic bifurcations period doubling bifurcations reconnection bifurcations tangent bifurcations and cusp bifurcations See also edit nbsp Mathematics portalBifurcation diagram Bifurcation memory Catastrophe theory Feigenbaum constants Geomagnetic reversal Phase portrait Tennis racket theoremNotes edit Blanchard P Devaney R L Hall G R 2006 Differential Equations London Thompson pp 96 111 ISBN 978 0 495 01265 8 Henri Poincare L Equilibre d une masse fluide animee d un mouvement de rotation Acta Mathematica vol 7 pp 259 380 Sept 1885 Strogatz Steven H 1994 Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos Addison Wesley p 262 ISBN 0 201 54344 3 Luo Dingjun 1997 Bifurcation Theory and Methods of Dynamical Systems World Scientific p 26 ISBN 981 02 2094 4 James P Keener Infinite Period Bifurcation and Global Bifurcation Branches SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics Vol 41 No 1 August 1981 pp 127 144 Gao J Delos J B 1997 Quantum manifestations of bifurcations of closed orbits in the photoabsorption spectra of atoms in electric fields Phys Rev A 56 1 356 364 Bibcode 1997PhRvA 56 356G doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 56 356 S2CID 120255640 Peters A D Jaffe C Delos J B 1994 Quantum Manifestations of Bifurcations of Classical Orbits An Exactly Solvable Model Phys Rev Lett 73 21 2825 2828 Bibcode 1994PhRvL 73 2825P doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 73 2825 PMID 10057205 S2CID 1641622 Courtney Michael Jiao Hong Spellmeyer Neal Kleppner Daniel Gao J Delos J B et al 1995 Closed Orbit Bifurcations in Continuum Stark Spectra Phys Rev Lett 74 9 1538 1541 Bibcode 1995PhRvL 74 1538C doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 74 1538 PMID 10059054 S2CID 21573702 Founargiotakis M Farantos S C Skokos Ch Contopoulos G 1997 Bifurcation diagrams of periodic orbits for unbound molecular systems FH2 Chemical Physics Letters 277 5 6 456 464 Bibcode 1997CPL 277 456F doi 10 1016 S0009 2614 97 00931 7 Monteiro T S amp Saraga D S 2001 Quantum Wells in Tilted Fields Semiclassical Amplitudes and Phase Coherence Times Foundations of Physics 31 2 355 370 doi 10 1023 A 1017546721313 S2CID 120968155 Wieczorek S Krauskopf B Simpson T B amp Lenstra D 2005 The dynamical complexity of optically injected semiconductor lasers Physics Reports 416 1 2 1 128 Bibcode 2005PhR 416 1W doi 10 1016 j physrep 2005 06 003 Stamatiou G amp Ghikas D P K 2007 Quantum entanglement dependence on bifurcations and scars in non autonomous systems The case of quantum kicked top Physics Letters A 368 3 4 206 214 arXiv quant ph 0702172 Bibcode 2007PhLA 368 206S doi 10 1016 j physleta 2007 04 003 S2CID 15562617 Galan J Freire E 1999 Chaos in a Mean Field Model of Coupled Quantum Wells Bifurcations of Periodic Orbits in a Symmetric Hamiltonian System Reports on Mathematical Physics 44 1 2 87 94 Bibcode 1999RpMP 44 87G doi 10 1016 S0034 4877 99 80148 7 Kleppner D Delos J B 2001 Beyond quantum mechanics Insights from the work of Martin Gutzwiller Foundations of Physics 31 4 593 612 doi 10 1023 A 1017512925106 S2CID 116944147 Gutzwiller Martin C 1990 Chaos in Classical and Quantum Mechanics New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 97173 5 References editAfrajmovich V S Arnold V I et al 1994 Bifurcation Theory and Catastrophe Theory ISBN 978 3 540 65379 0 Guardia M Martinez Seara M Teixeira M A 2011 Generic bifurcations of low codimension of planar Filippov Systems Journal of differential equations Febrer 2011 vol 250 num 4 pp 1967 2023 DOI 10 1016 j jde 2010 11 016 Wiggins Stephen 1988 Global bifurcations and Chaos Analytical Methods New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 96775 2 External links editNonlinear dynamics Bifurcations and Two Dimensional Flows by Elmer G Wiens Introduction to Bifurcation theory by John David Crawford Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bifurcation theory amp oldid 1167195971, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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