How to solve and plot this set of differential equations?

3 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Ijaz Ahmed
Ijaz Ahmed el 5 de Feb. de 2023
Comentada: Ijaz Ahmed el 25 de Feb. de 2023
Hello everyone,
I am trying to plot this set of differential equations, but so far I am getting some weird or no graphs at all.
we have the following equations:
and we want the red plot as under which is for a pulley profile:
and for the reference, we could use the previous graph on that research article as well:
and the code which I used recently for this was:
% code
l=1.5;
a=180;
f = @(t,y) [(l*y(1)*cos(a-t)-(y(1))^2)/(l*sin(a-t));y(1)+t*((l*y(1)*cos(a-t)-(y(1))^2)/(l*sin(a-t)))];
tspan = [0, 360];
% p(0) m(0)
xinit = [0, 15];
ode45(f, tspan, xinit)
legend('p(t)', 'm(t)')
For reference, here is the link to that article:

Respuestas (2)

Alan Stevens
Alan Stevens el 5 de Feb. de 2023
If rho starts at 0, then drho/dtheta will be zero and rho will not change from zero according to your first ode. If rho and drho/dtheta both stay at zero then m will not change either, according to your second ode.
  2 comentarios
Ijaz Ahmed
Ijaz Ahmed el 5 de Feb. de 2023
Well, for what value of rho would we be getting a graph similar to that one in the research article? I mean the rho is initially not zero, and setting it to a non-zero value is stil giving a graph with an L-shape.
Alan Stevens
Alan Stevens el 6 de Feb. de 2023
Editada: Alan Stevens el 6 de Feb. de 2023
"Well, for what value of rho would we be getting a graph similar to that one in the research article?."
From the graph it looks like something close to 2.
However, it seems you are also mixing radians (using sin and cos) with degrees (using 180 and 360).
Also, the graph is a polar plot, so it's probably plotting y vs x, where y is rho*sin(theta) and x is rho*cos(theta).

Iniciar sesión para comentar.


Sam Chak
Sam Chak el 6 de Feb. de 2023
I attempt to test the first of the first-order differential equations because it does not depend on m.
The relationship between m and ρ is also given by the Law of Cosines:
Note that singularities (division by zero) occur at , where .
l = 1.5;
odefcn = @(t, x) cot(pi - t)*x - 1/(l*sin(pi - t))*x.^2;
tspan = [0.1 3.122]; % theta from 0.1 rad to 3.122 rad
x0 = 1; % initial rho
[t, x] = ode45(odefcn, tspan, x0);
plot(t, x), grid on, xlabel('t')
  1 comentario
Ijaz Ahmed
Ijaz Ahmed el 25 de Feb. de 2023
but still nothing like that of the pulley profile given by the red plot in the first figure?

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Categorías

Más información sobre Numerical Integration and Differential Equations en Help Center y File Exchange.

Productos


Versión

R2022b

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by