Solving Equations in MATLAB

2 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
trythisone noone
trythisone noone le 27 Déc 2020
Commenté : Ameer Hamza le 28 Déc 2020
Hello,
I have the following equation.
cos(x) == 0
I want to get two or more possible solutions for the above equation which are 90, 270, and so on. The solve function returns the first solution only.
This technique is important for me to calculate the antenna beamwidths. Any ideas?
Thanks in Adv

Réponse acceptée

Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza le 27 Déc 2020
Modifié(e) : Ameer Hamza le 27 Déc 2020
There is no general solution to such a problem. A common way is to specify several starting points for the numerical solver and find the unique solutions.
y = @(x) cos(x);
x_range = 0:0.1:4*pi;
y_sol = zeros(size(x_range));
for i = 1:numel(x_range)
y_sol(i) = fzero(y, x_range(i));
end
y_sol = uniquetol(y_sol)
  2 commentaires
trythisone noone
trythisone noone le 27 Déc 2020
Wow, Nice trick man. It works fine. <3
Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza le 28 Déc 2020
I am glad to be of help!

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Plus de réponses (1)

John D'Errico
John D'Errico le 27 Déc 2020
SOME problems can be handled to find all solutions.
syms x
>> xsol = solve(cos(x) == 0,'returnconditions',true)
xsol =
struct with fields:
x: [1×1 sym]
parameters: [1×1 sym]
conditions: [1×1 sym]
>> xsol.parameters
ans =
k
>> xsol.conditions
ans =
in(k, 'integer')
>> xsol.x
ans =
pi/2 + pi*k
So we learn the set of all solutions takes the form
x = pi/2 + pi*k
where k is an integer.
Sadly, a fully general solution to many problems will not be written so easily. But you can always try.

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