Bogdanov-Takens bifurcation

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John Guckenheimer and Yuri A. Kuznetsov (2007), Scholarpedia, 2(1):1854. revision #39015 [link to/cite this article]

Curator: Dr. John Guckenheimer, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
Curator: Dr. Yuri A. Kuznetsov, Department of Mathematics, Utrecht University, The Netherlands

Bogdanov-Takens bifurcation
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Figure 1: Bogdanov-Takens bifurcation in planar system: \dot{y}_1=y_2 and \dot{y}_2=\beta_1 + \beta_2y_1+y_1^2-y_1y_2.

The Bogdanov-Takens (BT) bifurcation is a bifurcation of an equilibrium point in a two-parameter family of autonomous ODEs at which the critical equilibrium has a zero eigenvalue of (algebraic) mulitplicity two. For nearby parameter values, the system has two equilibria (a saddle and a nonsaddle) which collide and disappear via a saddle-node bifurcation. The nonsaddle equilibrium undergoes an Andronov-Hopf bifurcation generating a limit cycle. This cycle degenerates into an orbit homoclinic to the saddle and disappears via a saddle homoclinic bifurcation.

Contents

Definition

Consider an autonomous system of ordinary differential equations (ODEs)

(1)
\dot{x}=f(x,\alpha),\ \ \ x \in {\mathbb R}^n

depending on two parameters \alpha \in {\mathbb R}^2, where f is smooth.

This bifurcation is characterized by two bifurcation condition \lambda_1=\lambda_2=0 (has codimension two) and appears generically in two-parameter families of smooth ODEs.

Generically, the critical equilibrium x^0 is a double root of the equation f(x,0)=0 and \alpha=0 is the origin in the parameter plane of

Moreover, these bifurcations are nondegenerate and no other bifurcation occur in a small fixed neighbourhood of x^0 for parameter values sufficiently close to \alpha=0. In this neighbourhood, the system has at most two equilibria and one limit cycle.

Two-dimensional Case

To describe the BT-bifurcation analytically, consider the system (1) with n=2,

\dot{x} = f(x,\alpha), \ \ \ x \in {\mathbb R}^2.

If the following nondegeneracy conditions hold:

  • (BT.1) a(0)b(0) \neq 0, where a(0) and b(0) are certain quadratic coefficients (see below),
  • (BT.2) the map (x,\alpha) \mapsto  (f(x,\alpha),{\rm Tr}(f_x(x,\alpha)),\det(f_x(x,\alpha))) is regular at (x,\alpha)=(0,0),

then this system is locally topologically equivalent near the origin to the normal form

\dot{y}_1 = y_2,
\dot{y}_2 = \beta_1 + \beta_2 y_1 + y_1^2 + \sigma y_1y_2,

where y=(y_1,y_2)^T \in {\mathbb R}^2,\ \beta=(\beta_1,\beta_2)^T \in {\mathbb R}^2, and \sigma= {\rm sign}\ a(0)b(0) = \pm 1.

The local bifurcation diagram of the normal form with \sigma=-1 is presented in Figure 1. The point \beta=0 separates two branches of the saddle-node bifurcation curve:

T_{+}=\{(\beta_1,\beta_2): \beta_1=\frac{1}{4}\beta_2^2,\ \beta_2>0 \}

and

T_{-}=\{(\beta_1,\beta_2): \beta_1=\frac{1}{4}\beta_2^2,\ \beta_2<0 \}.

The half-line

H=\{(\beta_1,\beta_2): \beta_1=0,\ \beta_2<0 \}

corresponds to the Andronov-Hopf bifurcation that generates a stable limit cycle. This cycle exists and remains hyperbolic between the line H and a smooth curve

P=\{(\beta_1,\beta_2): \beta_1=-\frac{6}{25}\beta_2^2 + O(|\beta_2|^3),\ \beta_2<0 \},

at which a saddle homoclinic bifurcation occurs. When the cycle approaches the homoclinic orbit, its period tends to infinity.

The case \sigma=1 can be reduced to the one above by the substitution t \to -t, \ y_2 \to -y_2. This does not affect the bifurcation curves but the limit cycle becomes unstable.

Multidimensional Case

In the n-dimensional case with n \geq 2, the Jacobian matrix A_0 at the Bogdanov-Takens bifurcation has

  • a zero eigenvalue \lambda_{1,2}=0 with (algebraic) multiplicity two, as well as
  • n_s eigenvalues with {\rm Re}\ \lambda_j < 0, and
  • n_u eigenvalues with {\rm Re}\ \lambda_j > 0,

with n_s+n_u+2=n. According to the Center Manifold Theorem, there is a family of smooth two-dimensional invariant manifolds W^c_{\alpha} near the origin. The n-dimensional system restricted on W^c_{\alpha} is two-dimensional, hence has the normal form above.

Moreover, under the non-degeneracy conditions (BT.1) and (BT.2), the n-dimensional system is locally topologically equivalent near the origin to the suspension of the normal form by the standard saddle, i.e.

\dot{y}_1 = y_2,
\dot{y}_2 = \beta_1 + \beta_2 y_1 + y_1^2 + \sigma y_1y_2,
\dot{y}^s = -y^s,
\dot{y}^u = +y^u,

where y \in {\mathbb R}, y^s \in {\mathbb R}^{n_s}, \ y^u  \in {\mathbb R}^{n_u}.

Quadratic Coefficients

The quadratic coefficients a(0) and b(0), which are involved in the nondegeneracy condition (BT.1), can be computed for n \geq 2 as follows. Write the Taylor expansion of f(x,0) at x=0 as

f(x,0)=A_0x + \frac{1}{2}B(x,x) + O(\|x\|^3),

where B(x,y) is the bilinear function with components

\ \ B_j(x,y) =\sum_{k,l=1}^n \left. \frac{\partial^2 f_j(\xi,0)}{\partial \xi_k \partial \xi_l}\right|_{\xi=0} x_k y_l,

where j=1,2,\ldots,n. Let q_0, q_1, p_0, p_1\in {\mathbb R}^n be nonzero vectors that satisfy:

\ \ A_0q=0, \ A_0q_1=q_0, \ A_0p_1=0, \ A_0p_0=p_1

and are normalized so that

\langle p_0, q_0 \rangle = \langle p_1, q_1 \rangle = 1,\  \langle p_0, q_1 \rangle = \langle p_1, q_0 \rangle = 0,

where \langle p, q \rangle = p^Tq is the standard inner product in {\mathbb R}^n. Then (see, for example, Kuznetsov (2004))

a(0)= \frac{1}{2} \langle p_1, B(q_0,q_0))\rangle,\ \  b(0)= \langle p_0, B(q_0,q_0))\rangle + \langle p_1, B(q_0,q_1))\rangle.

Standard bifurcation software (e.g. MATCONT) computes a(0) and b(0)automatically.

Other Cases

Bogdanov-Takens bifurcation occurs also in infinitely-dimensional ODEs generated by PDEs and DDEs, to which the Center Manifold Theorem applies.

References

  • V.I. Arnold (1983) Geometrical Methods in the Theory of Ordinary Differential Equations. Grundlehren Math. Wiss., 250, Springer
  • J. Guckenheimer and P. Holmes (1983) Nonlinear Oscillations, Dynamical systems and Bifurcations of Vector Fields. Springer
  • Yu.A. Kuznetsov (2004) Elements of Applied Bifurcation Theory, Springer, 3rd edition.

Internal references

  • Yuri A. Kuznetsov (2006) Andronov-Hopf bifurcation. Scholarpedia, 1(10):1858.
  • John Guckenheimer (2007) Bifurcation. Scholarpedia, 2(6):1517.
  • James Meiss (2007) Dynamical systems. Scholarpedia, 2(2):1629.
  • Eugene M. Izhikevich (2007) Equilibrium. Scholarpedia, 2(10):2014.
  • Willy Govaerts, Yuri A. Kuznetsov, Bart Sautois (2006) MATCONT. Scholarpedia, 1(9):1375.
  • James Murdock (2006) Normal forms. Scholarpedia, 1(10):1902.
  • Jeff Moehlis, Kresimir Josic, Eric T. Shea-Brown (2006) Periodic orbit. Scholarpedia, 1(7):1358.
  • Yuri A. Kuznetsov (2006) Saddle-node bifurcation. Scholarpedia, 1(10):1859.
  • Philip Holmes and Eric T. Shea-Brown (2006) Stability. Scholarpedia, 1(10):1838.
  • Emmanuil E. Shnol (2007) Stability of equilibria. Scholarpedia, 2(3):2770.
  • Bard Ermentrout (2007) XPPAUT. Scholarpedia, 2(1):1399.

External Links

See Also

Andronov-Hopf Bifurcation, Saddle-node Bifurcation, Bifurcations, Center Manifold Theorem, Dynamical Systems, Equilibria, MATCONT, Ordinary Differential Equations, Homoclinic Bifurcation, XPPAUT


John Guckenheimer, Yuri A. Kuznetsov (2007) Bogdanov-Takens bifurcation. Scholarpedia, 2(1):1854, (go to the first approved version)
Created: 9 August 2006, reviewed: 22 January 2007, accepted: 22 January 2007
Action editor: Dr. Eugene M. Izhikevich, Editor-in-Chief of Scholarpedia, the peer-reviewed open-access encyclopedia
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