- You need to create 3 3-D arrays for x, y, and z, in the given range -- hint: linspace and meshgrid.
- Then you need to evaluate the function g(x,y,z) at each of those x, y, z locations: V = (X.^2+9*Y.^2/4+Z.^2-1).^3 - X.^2.*Z.^3 (etc)
how can we plot this function as 3d with matlab?
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how can we plot this fucntion as 3d with matlab? I tried surf and ezplot to plot function. but they didnt work. thanks for help.
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Matt Tearle
il 12 Set 2012
Aww, cute.
The reason you can't use surf or ezplot is that these are not designed for this kind of equation. To use surf you need to have a surface defined as z = f(x,y). You have g(x,y,z) = 0. If you could rearrange that into z = f(x,y), you could use surf, but the equation you have doesn't really allow that.
So... instead, go back to the definition of the surface as g(x,y,z) = 0. Think of this as a particular isosurface of the function g(x,y,z) (with isosurface value of 0).
To make a surface in MATLAB from that kind of setup, you need (surprise, surprise) isosurface. Look in the documentation at the examples for isosurface. They will guide you through the visualization.
The one thing you need that isn't in the isosurface doc is to create the data to plot. (The examples do [x,y,z,v] = flow; which creates the data from a canned routine for a specific example.) So:
Now you have the data, you can plot, using the examples in the isosurface documentation.
You'll "love" the result. Haha. I'm so funny.
6 Commenti
Sean de Wolski
il 12 Set 2012
@Azzi - no you don't!
isosurface is essentially a three dimensional contour plot. When you set the threshold value to zero, it will draw the isosurface at that interface thus automagically solving the equation for you :)
Più risposte (3)
Azzi Abdelmalek
il 12 Set 2012
Modificato: Azzi Abdelmalek
il 12 Set 2012
sol=[];
for k=-3:0.1:3
for m=-3:0.1:3
x=[k m];
a=x(1)^2+x(2)^2*9/4-1;
v=[1 0 3*a 0 + 3*a^2 0 a^3 ];
z=roots(v);
z=z(imag(z)==0);
n=length(z);
if n>0
xyz=[repmat(x(1:2),n,1) z];
sol=[sol;xyz];
end
end
end
plot3(sol(:,1),sol(:,2),sol(:,3))
murat can
il 12 Set 2012
3 Commenti
Sean de Wolski
il 12 Set 2012
Modificato: Sean de Wolski
il 12 Set 2012
You don't need to define X,Y,Z,V as syms since they won't be syms but rather double arrays....
Removing that line, it works for me.
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