How can i calculate e^A*t

How can i calculate e^A*t without using Markov Chain?
Where e=exp , A is a square matrix, and t is a variable

11 comentarios

Wayne King
Wayne King el 30 de Mayo de 2012
When you say t is a variable, what do you mean? what is the dimension of t?
Nick
Nick el 31 de Mayo de 2012
ok , t>=0 but this question it is not about how to calculate it on Matlab just to see the result because Elad answer is correct (exp(A.*t)) but i want deeper meaning of the solution.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 31 de Mayo de 2012
What deeper meaning? It's a formula presented outside of any context. Are you asking for the deeper meaning of why MATLAB uses exp(x) to represent e^x ?
Elad
Elad el 31 de Mayo de 2012
Using the dot after A, means it will multiply each element in the matrix separately.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 31 de Mayo de 2012
If t is a scalar then using the dot or not using the dot means the same thing. Using the dot makes a difference when neither A nor t are scalar.
Oleg Komarov
Oleg Komarov el 31 de Mayo de 2012
My crystall ball tells me that Nick is looking for a deeeeper meeaninnggg... deeeeeeeperr..
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 31 de Mayo de 2012
Perhaps Nick is data mining? I wonder what he will unearth?
ABCD
ABCD el 29 de Sept. de 2016
Dear Nick, do you mean this?
>> a = [1 2 3 ; 2 5 2; 1 4 3]
a =
1 2 3
2 5 2
1 4 3
>> syms t
>> exp(a*t)
ans =
[ exp(t), exp(2*t), exp(3*t)]
[ exp(2*t), exp(5*t), exp(2*t)]
[ exp(t), exp(4*t), exp(3*t)]
CHENG WEI SHEN
CHENG WEI SHEN el 12 de Jun. de 2022
???
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 12 de Jun. de 2022
Please expand on your question ?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 10 de Jul. de 2025
Looking back, I am wondering whether the '*' is intended to represent conjugate transpose, so MATLAB
exp(A' * t)
or perhaps
expm(A' * t)

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 Respuesta aceptada

Elad
Elad el 30 de Mayo de 2012

1 voto

exp(A.*t)

1 comentario

Andika
Andika el 10 de Jul. de 2025
Depending on the context, if you want to compute matrix exponential, you can use the expm function as others had described before.
Starting in R2023b, you can also use the expmv function to calculate the product of a matrix exponential and a vector (which is faster compared to expm). The syntax to do this is F = expmv(A,b,t), which is equivalent to expm(t*A)*b. Here, A is an n-by-n square matrix, b is an n-by-1 column vector, and t is a scalar.

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Más respuestas (5)

Kye Taylor
Kye Taylor el 31 de Mayo de 2012

10 votos

Use the expm function for computing a matrix exponential

4 comentarios

KJ N
KJ N el 9 de Nov. de 2017
To help anyone else coming here: ignore all the other answers saying to use exp. Using expm is the right one for this situation. If you want to compute the matrix exponential e^(A t), where A is a n x n square matrix and t is a variable, and you DO NOT want to do simply do the by-element exponential, i.e., you want to compute the equivalent of the inverse Laplace of s*eye(n)-A, which is important in state-space analysis of linear systems, you want to use expm(A*t), not exp(A*t).
>> A = [0 1; -2 -3]
A =
0 1
-2 -3
>> syms t;expm(A*t)
ans =
[ 2*exp(-t) - exp(-2*t), exp(-t) - exp(-2*t)]
[ 2*exp(-2*t) - 2*exp(-t), 2*exp(-2*t) - exp(-t)]
>> syms s;ilaplace(inv(s*eye(rank(A))-A))
ans =
[ 2*exp(-t) - exp(-2*t), exp(-t) - exp(-2*t)]
[ 2*exp(-2*t) - 2*exp(-t), 2*exp(-2*t) - exp(-t)]
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 9 de Nov. de 2017
Kaleb Nelson, no: the poster said above https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/39854-how-can-i-calculate-e-a-t#comment_82495 that exp(A.*t) is the correct solution.
KJ N
KJ N el 9 de Nov. de 2017
exp() only does computes the exponential of A element-by-element, as shown above like this: >> a = [1 2 3 ; 2 5 2; 1 4 3]
a =
1 2 3
2 5 2
1 4 3
>> syms t
>> exp(a*t)
ans =
[ exp(t), exp(2*t), exp(3*t)]
[ exp(2*t), exp(5*t), exp(2*t)]
[ exp(t), exp(4*t), exp(3*t)]
If that's what you're going for, that's great, but not terribly difficult to compute by hand for even somewhat large n x n matrices with integer elements. However, the original poster said they wanted to avoid using the markov chain (a somewhat onerous process, especially when done by hand for large matrices, even with simple integer values as the elements), leading me to understand they were referring to the matrix exponential, not the element-by-element exponential, hence the correct answer in this case would be to use expm(). I had been looking for the same answer, and Kye Taylor was the only post saying use expm instead of exp, so I thought I would try to ensure those in the future looking for the same answer as myself would be helped by a clarification.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 9 de Nov. de 2017
We tried a number of times to get the original poster to clarify, but all we got was that they want the exp() solution and that they are looking for a "deeper reason" for something. The poster effectively defined the exp() solution as being the correct one.
Your analysis might well be what the poster really needed, but it is contrary to what little they defined as being correct for their needs.

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Junsheng SU
Junsheng SU el 28 de Nov. de 2017

6 votos

syms t; expm(A*t);
Shenhai
Shenhai el 20 de En. de 2017
Editada: Shenhai el 20 de En. de 2017

3 votos

I guess it is not always possible to get the close form solution of exp(At)...
Sometimes I can get result with: exp(At) = iL(sI-A)^-1, where iL is the inverse Laplace transformation, like:
syms s t
A = [0 1;0 0];
expAt = ilaplace(inv(s*eye(size(A,1))-A),s,t);
This will give the result as: [1 t;0 1]
Any other ideas?
Shahram Bekhrad
Shahram Bekhrad el 8 de Jun. de 2012

0 votos

As far as I'm aware you probably need it for finding the answer of a state space equation. I myself couldn't find any good function or command yet, so you might have to write a Script file (m-file) and find it. you can use about 3 or 4 way of calculating the said statement. These things are taught in courses like modern control theory. I used the following expression but still have some difficulties. exp(A.t)=I+At+ (At)^2/2! + (At)^3/3!+ (At)^4/4!+. . .
ABCD
ABCD el 29 de Sept. de 2016

0 votos

Dear Nick, do you mean this?
>> a = [1 2 3 ; 2 5 2; 1 4 3]
a =
1 2 3
2 5 2
1 4 3
>> syms t >> exp(a*t)
ans =
[ exp(t), exp(2*t), exp(3*t)] [ exp(2*t), exp(5*t), exp(2*t)] [ exp(t), exp(4*t), exp(3*t)]

1 comentario

ABCD
ABCD el 29 de Sept. de 2016
>> a = [1 2 3 ; 2 5 2; 1 4 3]
a =
1 2 3
2 5 2
1 4 3
>> syms t
>> exp(a*t)
ans =
[ exp(t), exp(2*t), exp(3*t)]
[ exp(2*t), exp(5*t), exp(2*t)]
[ exp(t), exp(4*t), exp(3*t)]

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Preguntada:

el 30 de Mayo de 2012

Comentada:

el 10 de Jul. de 2025

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