f(s) =
integrate with the upper limit is a function
Afficher commentaires plus anciens
Hello!
How to integrate a function on Matlab with the upper limit is a function, for exemple the following integral:

i tried this code:
U= vpa(int(f,s,0,t^2))
but it returns int(f,s,0,t^2)!!
is there any method to do it?
9 commentaires
Star Strider
le 31 Juil 2024
Déplacé(e) : Star Strider
le 4 Août 2024
The Symbolic Math Toolbox appropriately considers
an otherwise undefined function.
Define it and you get an actual result —
syms s t
f(s) = 1 / (s^2 + 2*s + 1)
U = vpa(int(f,s,0,t^2))
.
L.GREEN
le 31 Juil 2024
Déplacé(e) : Star Strider
le 4 Août 2024
Torsten
le 31 Juil 2024
Déplacé(e) : Star Strider
le 4 Août 2024
Why i dont have the result of the integral?
MATLAB cannot compute an analytical antiderivative of f. And such an antiderivative would be necessary because the result is not a numerical value, but a function of the symbolic variable t.
L.GREEN
le 31 Juil 2024
Déplacé(e) : Star Strider
le 4 Août 2024
Torsten
le 31 Juil 2024
Déplacé(e) : Star Strider
le 4 Août 2024
Is there any other alternative to do it on Matlab?
If you want to keep t symbolic: no.
If you give t numerical values, you can use "integral" for evaluation.
f = @(s) sin(0.008414709848078965066525023216303*exp(-2*s.^(1/2)) + 0.00008414709848078965066525023216303*cos(s).^2 + 0.008414709848078965066525023216303) + 1;
F = @(t)integral(f,0,t^2);
tnum = 0:0.1:5;
Fnum = arrayfun(@(t)F(t),tnum);
plot(tnum,Fnum)
grid on
Star Strider
le 31 Juil 2024
Déplacé(e) : Star Strider
le 4 Août 2024
The int function is not doing the integration (or the subsequent substitution). Not all functions have analytic integrals, and yours is apparently one of them.
syms s t
f(s) = sin(0.008414709848078965066525023216303*exp(-2*s^(1/2)) + 0.00008414709848078965066525023216303*cos(s)^2 + 0.008414709848078965066525023216303) + 1
U1 = int(f,s)
% U = vpa(int(f,s,0,t^2))
% U = simplify(U, 100)
Consider instead integrating this numerically if you want a numeric result, using the integral function.
.
L.GREEN
le 31 Juil 2024
Déplacé(e) : Star Strider
le 4 Août 2024
Walter Roberson
le 31 Juil 2024
Déplacé(e) : Star Strider
le 4 Août 2024
If you have working with a mix of scalar constants and scalar symbolic variables, then you can use ^ and / instead of .^ and ./ . You only need .^ and ./ if you are working with non-scalar values.
syms s t
f1 = sin(0.008414709848078965066525023216303*exp(-2*s^(1/2)) + 0.00008414709848078965066525023216303*cos(s)^2 + 0.008414709848078965066525023216303) + 1
f2 = sin(0.008414709848078965066525023216303*exp(-2*s.^(1/2)) + 0.00008414709848078965066525023216303*cos(s).^2 + 0.008414709848078965066525023216303) + 1
isAlways(f1 == f2)
Torsten
le 1 Août 2024
Déplacé(e) : Star Strider
le 4 Août 2024
The inconvient of the intergal function is that we need to use '.^ 'and/or './'
If you have a symbolic function and want to convert it to a function that can be used together with "integral", use "matlabFunction". Here, you will also get .^, ./ and .* operators.
Another way is to use the 'ArrayValues',true option for "integral" that passes one value for s to the function at a time. The disadvantage is that this option might slow down the integration:
f = @(s) sin(0.008414709848078965066525023216303*exp(-2*s^(1/2)) + 0.00008414709848078965066525023216303*cos(s)^2 + 0.008414709848078965066525023216303) + 1;
F = @(t) integral(f,0,t^2,'ArrayValued',1);
tnum = 0:0.1:5;
Fnum = arrayfun(@(t)F(t),tnum);
plot(tnum,Fnum)
grid on
Réponses (0)
Catégories
En savoir plus sur Calculus dans Centre d'aide et File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!



