Saddle-node bifurcation

In the mathematical area of bifurcation theory a saddle-node bifurcation, tangential bifurcation or fold bifurcation is a local bifurcation in which two fixed points (or equilibria) of a dynamical system collide and annihilate each other. The term 'saddle-node bifurcation' is most often used in reference to continuous dynamical systems. In discrete dynamical systems, the same bifurcation is often instead called a fold bifurcation. Another name is blue skies bifurcation in reference to the sudden creation of two fixed points.[1]

If the phase space is one-dimensional, one of the equilibrium points is unstable (the saddle), while the other is stable (the node).

Saddle-node bifurcations may be associated with hysteresis loops and catastrophes.

Normal form

A typical example of a differential equation with a saddle-node bifurcation is:

\frac{dx}{dt}=r+x^2.

Here x is the state variable and r is the bifurcation parameter.

Saddle node bifurcation

In fact, this is a normal form of a saddle-node bifurcation. A scalar differential equation  \tfrac{dx}{dt} = f(r,x) which has a fixed point at  x = 0 for  r = 0 with  \tfrac{\partial f}{\partial x}(0,0) = 0 is locally topologically equivalent to  \frac{dx}{dt} = r \pm x^2 , provided it satisfies  \tfrac{\partial^2\! f}{\partial x^2}(0,0) \ne 0 and  \tfrac{\partial f}{\partial r}(0,0) \ne 0 . The first condition is the nondegeneracy condition and the second condition is the transversality condition.[3]

Example in two dimensions

Phase portrait showing saddle-node bifurcation

An example of a saddle-node bifurcation in two dimensions occurs in the two-dimensional dynamical system:

 \frac {dx} {dt} = \alpha - x^2
 \frac {dy} {dt} = - y.

As can be seen by the animation obtained by plotting phase portraits by varying the parameter  \alpha ,

A saddle-node bifurcation also occurs in the consumer equation (see transcritical bifurcation) if the consumption term is changed from px to p, that is, the consumption rate is constant and not in proportion to resource x.

Other examples are in modelling biological switches (see a tutorial for the computational techniques in modelling biological switches with an easy to understand synthetic toggle switch that demonstrates the bistability and hysteresis behavior showing the saddle-nodes or tipping points[4]).

See also

Notes

  1. Strogatz 1994, p. 47.
  2. Kuznetsov 1998, pp. 80–81.
  3. Kuznetsov 1998, Theorems 3.1 and 3.2.
  4. Chong et al. (2015) http://www.mssanz.org.au/modsim2015/C2/chong.pdf

References

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