Why is there a jagged line when I plot this function?
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
Hi guys,
I am trying to plot an implicit function and am getting strange results. I understand the smooth part of the function, but not the jagged part. Why is the jagged part there at all? Also, what can I do to eliminate it?
Here's the code:
f1=(@(x,y) (5.*y.^(1./2) -3)./(2.5.*y.^(1./2)+2.5.*x.^(1./2)-3)-y);
fimplicit(f1,[0 4 0 4],'black')
Antworten (2)
tmarske
am 16 Mär. 2020
It's because fimplicit is using too few evaluation points, resulting in too coarse an interpolation (by default it uses 151). You can override this using the 'MeshDensity' argument:
f1=(@(x,y) (5.*y.^(1./2) -3)./(2.5.*y.^(1./2)+2.5.*x.^(1./2)-3)-y);
fimplicit(f1,[0 4 0 4],'black', 'MeshDensity', 5000)
6 Kommentare
econogist
am 16 Mär. 2020
Walter Roberson
am 16 Mär. 2020
What would you expect the result to look like? There are two lower-branch solutions for each x, and at some point they become equal and cross; what would you discard?
econogist
am 16 Mär. 2020
Walter Roberson
am 17 Mär. 2020
Ah, what is happening is that your function has a discontinuity in it, and what fimplicit is detecting is not a zero but rather a sign change.
econogist
am 17 Mär. 2020
Walter Roberson
am 17 Mär. 2020
Bearbeitet: Walter Roberson
am 17 Mär. 2020
If you have the symbolic toolbox, you can solve f1 for x in term of y to get a single x for each y. you can then linspace() for y and put those through the equation to derive x, and then plot(x,y)
econogist
am 17 Mär. 2020
Kategorien
Mehr zu Mathematics finden Sie in Hilfe-Center und File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!