Effacer les filtres
Effacer les filtres

ode45

7 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Nani C
Nani C le 7 Mai 2012
Hi, Having solved a second order equation of motion using ode45 function i wonder how could i modify the function to solve a whole system of equations in matrix form [A]{xdoubledot}+[B]{xdot}+[c]{x}={p(t)}, instead of solving individual equations for x vector variables. Would that be possible ?

Réponse acceptée

Richard Brown
Richard Brown le 7 Mai 2012
Yes, certainly possible. The basic approach would be to turn it into a system of first order odes of twice the dimension as follows (where x and xdot are vectors):
y1 = x
y2 = xdot
then, if A is invertible
y1' = y2
y2' = A \ (-B*y2 - c*y1 + p(t))
You'd then write a file to implement this in MATLAB like this
function dy = myode(t, y)
n = numel(y)/2;
y1 = y(1:n);
y2 = y(n+1:2*n);
dy = [y2; A \ (-B*y2 - c*y1 + p(t))
end
and solve it with ode45 (or whichever solver happens to be most suitable) as usual.
  2 commentaires
Nani C
Nani C le 7 Mai 2012
t.y. Richard. it worked. It would be helpful if you can clarify on 'twice the dimension'. Any help links will also be useful.
Jan
Jan le 7 Mai 2012
You can convert an ODE of degree 2 for an n-dimensional vector to an ODE of degree 1 for a 2n-dimensional vector. This means "twice the dimensions". In other words: Instead of calculating the 1st and 2nd derivative of the position, you calculate the 1st derivative of the position and the velocity.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Plus de réponses (0)

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by