Creating a 3D surface of multiple lines
7 visualizzazioni (ultimi 30 giorni)
Mostra commenti meno recenti
Alexander Engman
il 6 Apr 2018
Commentato: Star Strider
il 6 Apr 2018
Hi!
I have two variables (Vf,r) that in my code has generated values of a function (f). Vf is the volume fraction of particles and r is the radius of a particle. My code is designed to run calculations over a specified interval for Vf with a set value of r and then return the values of f. Then, it skips to the next value of r and runs the same calculations a set number of times. In the end I have something that looks like:
r =
1.0e-04 *
0.1000 0.2000 0.3000
Vfvec =
0.0010 0.0010 0.0010
0.0020 0.0020 0.0020
0.0030 0.0030 0.0030
0.0040 0.0040 0.0040
0.0050 0.0050 0.0050
0.0060 0.0060 0.0060
0.0070 0.0070 0.0070
0.0080 0.0080 0.0080
0.0090 0.0090 0.0090
0.0100 0.0100 0.0100
f =
1.6135 2.2791 2.7901
1.2143 1.7143 2.0983
1.0283 1.4512 1.7761
0.9144 1.2901 1.5786
0.8352 1.1779 1.4413
0.7758 1.0939 1.3383
0.7291 1.0278 1.2573
0.6910 0.9739 1.1914
0.6592 0.9289 1.1362
0.6321 0.8906 1.0892
If I plot all of this in 2D with Vf on the x-axis, I get a plot with three different lines, each corresponding to a certain value of r and with the correct values of f for each line. To make this more presentable, I want to plot this in 3D instead. Basically what I want is to plot the lines side by side instead of on top of each other, preferably but not necessarily creating some kind of 3D surface. How would I do this?
Many thanks in advance.
Alexander
0 Commenti
Risposta accettata
Star Strider
il 6 Apr 2018
This works (in R2018a):
figure
surf(r, Vfvec, f)
grid on
xlabel('\bfr\rm')
ylabel('\bfVfvec\rm')
zlabel('\bff\rm')
view(-120, 25)
This uses the data you posted.
2 Commenti
Più risposte (0)
Vedere anche
Categorie
Scopri di più su 2-D and 3-D Plots in Help Center e File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!