Interpolating data with specifc / non-consistent "X" values:

5 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Chris
Chris le 20 Fév 2014
Réponse apportée : Chris le 20 Fév 2014
Hey,
I've got a question that I can't seem to find within MATLAB functions. Right now, I'm trying to get an approximation for sun "yaw" data for a controller I'm trying to design. Right now, I have data at days (beginning from Jul. 15, and day 189 being Jan. 20. )
[1 95 189 277 365]
(If curious, I decided to start experiment after summer solstice happened, and there was only 1 day of sunshine I was free in the Dec. and Jan. months. So, that's why there's not an even split.)
Anyway, using an online suncalc checker, I was able to get yaw angles at each hour on these 5 days, which was nice. However, I'm running into a problem.
My plan initially was to find the polynomial fit for each hour. For instance, at 12:00 on each above day, I have yaw angles:
[56 73 84 66 56]
Now, using Excel, I get the plot in the picture.
My question is how do I generate this plot in MATLAB?
Thanks for any help in advance.

Réponse acceptée

Dishant Arora
Dishant Arora le 20 Fév 2014
you can realize the polynomial using polyfit function:
P = polyfit(X, Y, n) % n is the order of the polynomial you want

Plus de réponses (2)

Chris
Chris le 20 Fév 2014
Further comment:
I can't seem to get the picture to load. And I'm having trouble with Imgur at the moment (Firefox and Chrome), so I can't upload it.
If you do plot the data above:
X = [1 95 189 277 365] Y = [56 73 84 66 56]
with a 2nd order polynomial fit, you get (in Excel)
Y = -0,0007x^2 + 0.2569x + 56.06
R^2 = 0.8817

Chris
Chris le 20 Fév 2014
Thank you.

Catégories

En savoir plus sur Polynomials dans Help Center et File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by