Pitchfork bifurcation

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In bifurcation theory, a field within mathematics, a pitchfork bifurcation is a particular type of local bifurcation where the system transitions from one fixed point to three fixed points. Pitchfork bifurcations, like Hopf bifurcations, have two types – supercritical and subcritical.

In continuous dynamical systems described by ODEsi.e. flowspitchfork bifurcations occur generically in systems with symmetry.

Supercritical case: solid lines represent stable points, while dotted line represents unstable one.

The normal form of the supercritical pitchfork bifurcation is

For , there is one stable equilibrium at . For there is an unstable equilibrium at , and two stable equilibria at .

Subcritical case

Subcritical case: solid line represents stable point, while dotted lines represent unstable ones.

The normal form for the subcritical case is

In this case, for the equilibrium at is stable, and there are two unstable equilibria at . For the equilibrium at is unstable.

Formal definition

See also

References

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