The independent coordinate ~z~ has sense of
time. Indeed, it may be proportional to time ~t~ with some relation like ~z=t/t_0~, where ~t_0~ is constant. The
derivative ~\dot x=\frac{{\rm d}x}{{\rm d}z} may have sense of
velocity of particle with coordinate ~x~; then ~\ddot x=\frac{{\rm d}^2x}{{\rm d}z^2}~ can be interpreted as
acceleration; and the mass of such a particle is equal to unity. The dissipative function ~D~ may have sense of coefficient of the speed-proportional
friction. Usually, both parameters ~u~ and ~v~ are supposed to be positive; then this speed-proportional friction coefficient grows exponentially at large positive values of coordinate ~x~. The potential ~\Phi(x)=e^x-x-1~ is a fixed function, which also shows
exponential growth at large positive values of coordinate ~x~. In the application in
laser physics, ~x~ may have a sense of
logarithm of number of photons in the
laser cavity, related to its steady-state value. Then, the
output power of such a laser is proportional to ~\exp(x)~ and may show pulsation at
oscillation of ~x~. Both analogies, with a unity mass particle and logarithm of number of photons, are useful in the analysis of behavior of the Toda oscillator. ==Energy==