explanation on boundary condition matrix

where can i find an explanation about boundary condition matrix? especially what does each row in this matrix stands for. the documantation provided in the matlab help is not very clear.
thank you.

 Réponse acceptée

Bill Greene
Bill Greene le 17 Sep 2013

0 votes

Have you looked at this page?
There is a general description of the matrix format along with two examples.
If you are defining boundary conditions in a MATLAB script, my own preference (and recommendation) is to write a "boundary file" (user-written MATLAB function) to define your boundary conditions instead of trying to create a boundary matrix. I find writing a boundary condition function to be much more straightforward than writing a boundary matrix. The approach is documented here:
Bill

3 commentaires

Dany
Dany le 18 Sep 2013
still not clear enough, although the "pdebound" might work. but now a new question came up. when you use the "pdebound" function you get 4 matrices at the end:
[qmatrix,gmatrix,hmatrix,rmatrix] = pdebound(p,e,u,time)
but when you use the "assempde" function you have to use one boundary matrix. how does those 4 matrices replace/create the one boundary matrix needed for the "assempde" function?
thank you.
The first argument to assempde (or pdenonlin, parabolic, etc) can be a function handle. For example:
b = @pdebound;
u=assempde(b, ...);
(Note, the function doesn't have to be named pdebound for this to work.)
Bill
When I have only Dirichlet boundary conditions, do I have to gibe "assempde" 4 matrixes (q,g,h,r) or just 2 matrixes (h,r) with the command
if true
b = @pdebund
u = assempde(b, ...)
end

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