Mapping the State
A Phase Portrait is a map of all possible trajectories of a system in the \(x-y\) plane. It tells us the "long-term fate" of the system without solving the equations explicitly.
- Stable Node: All paths lead to a center (equilibrium).
- Unstable Node: All paths lead away.
- Saddle Point: Paths are attracted from one side and pushed away from the other.
- Center/Spiral: The system rotates or oscillates.
Worked Examples
Example 1: The Pendulum
The phase portrait of a pendulum shows circles (oscillation) for small angles. If you push it hard enough, the circles break open into waves—this represents the pendulum "looping" all the way around.
The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics
Phase space is where Quantum Mechanics meets Geometry. A quantum state is a point in a massive, high-dimensional phase space (Hilbert Space). While we can't draw a 200-dimensional portrait, the Stability of an atom is defined by the fact that the electron's state is a "Stable Center." If the atom's state were a saddle point or an unstable node, the electron would fly away, and matter would not exist. Stability analysis is how we prove that atoms are permanent structures.