Problem with ode45 code ?

7 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Jenny Briggs
Jenny Briggs le 12 Fév 2016
Commenté : Brian Russell le 25 Mar 2020
Hi, i'm really new to Matlab. I am using ode45 to solve this differential equation:
y1prime = y2
y2prime = -y1 - (1/t)*(y2)
I am plotting it over the closed interval 1, 50.
It has the intial conditions:
y1(0)=0
y2(0)=0
y2prime(0)=0.
However i keep getting error messages about my m-script. I am using a code from quite an old book, so i'm not sure if that has anything to do with it. I would appreciate if anybody could have a quick look to see where i've gone wrong. Thank you
function yprime = pend(t,y)
yprime = [y(2); -y(1)-((y(2))/t)];
tspan = [1 50];
yazero = [0;0]; ybzero = [0;0]; yczero = [0;0];
[ta, ya] = ode45(@pend, tspan, yazero);
[tb, yb] = ode45(@pend, tspan, ybzero);
[tc, yc] = ode45(@pend, tspan, yczero);
[y1,y2] = meshgrid(-5:.5:5,-3:.5:3);
Dy1Dt = y2; Dy2Dt = -y(1)-((y(2))/t);
quiver(y1,y2,Dy1Dt,Dy2Dt)
hold on
plot(ya(:,1),ya(:,2),yb(:,1),yb(:,2),yc(:,1),yc(:,2))
axis equal, axis([-5 5 -3 3])
xlabel y_1(t), ylabel y_2(t), hold off
end
  5 commentaires
Brian Russell
Brian Russell le 25 Mar 2020
I see your problem. The old book you refer to is "MATLB Guide" by Higham and Higham, which I think is in general a brilliant book. However, they often leave out statements in their code which they assume their reader will know to put in. I also struggled with this example until I realized that their function is very short. In fact, it is only two lines:
function yprime = pend(t,y)
yprime = [y(2); -y(1)-((y(2))/t)];
There should be an end after these two lines. This short function should be saved in a file called pend.m. The rest of your code should be put in another program, say pend_run.m. This will fix your problem.
Brian Russell
Brian Russell le 25 Mar 2020
I meant "MATLAB Guide", of course!

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Réponses (1)

John D'Errico
John D'Errico le 12 Fév 2016
So, just suppose I decide to try to solve your problem, assuming that you really intended to solve it over the interval [1,50]. That would take no more complicated code than this:
yp = @(y,t) [y(2);-y(1) - y(2)./t);
[tout,yout] = ode45(yp,[1,50],[0 0]);
The result would be rather boring though, since you have postulated a differential equation system of the form:
y1' = 0
y2' = 0
Note that since y1(1) = y2(1) = 0 at the beginning, they will STAY at zero forever. And ever. And ever.
Kind of boring.

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by