Curve fitting with constraints

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Paul Van der Merwe
Paul Van der Merwe el 1 de Mzo. de 2019
Comentada: Nicholas Ross el 26 de Feb. de 2024
Hi,
I am trying to fit an curve with an exponential function and need it to pass through (0,0) with a gradient of 0 at that point.
I've attached a picture of the data and curve. I am trying to use to the curve fitting toolbox to do this.
Any ideas would be greatly appreciated
Thanks
  8 comentarios
Torsten
Torsten el 1 de Mzo. de 2019
In your graphics, the x-values are positive (range from 0 to 90) and the y-values are negative( range from 0 to -3). If this is reversed in reality, you can fit the inverse function by the above ansatz.
Paul Van der Merwe
Paul Van der Merwe el 1 de Mzo. de 2019
Sorry that's confusing. Ignore the axis labels (I need the inverted function). So the y values range of 0 - 90 and the x values range from 0 - -3e5. I am currently struggling to fit the inversed function with exponential terms.

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Respuesta aceptada

Matt J
Matt J el 1 de Mzo. de 2019
Editada: Matt J el 1 de Mzo. de 2019
Using the 'power1' fit type, I obtain pretty close agreement.
>> cfit = fit(x1(x1>0),y1(x1>0),'power1')
cfit =
General model Power1:
cfit(x) = a*x^b
Coefficients (with 95% confidence bounds):
a = -0.07755 (-0.07888, -0.07622)
b = 3.316 (3.312, 3.32)
>> plot(cfit,x1,y1)
  4 comentarios
Paul Van der Merwe
Paul Van der Merwe el 1 de Mzo. de 2019
Very good point!
Thanks a lot for your help
Nicholas Ross
Nicholas Ross el 26 de Feb. de 2024
@Matt J thank you for posting this! I wasn't getting a good result with exp1 or lsqcurvefit and this fit my curve perfectly! Thanks for making my Monday morning

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Más respuestas (2)

Alex Sha
Alex Sha el 1 de Feb. de 2020
Hellow, Paul, if adding one more parameter in your fitting function, i.e. y = a*exp(b*x) + c*exp(d*x)+f
Then:
from y(0) = 0, we get: f = -(a+c);
from y'(0) = 0, we get: d=-a*b/c;
It can be easy to get the:
Root of Mean Square Error (RMSE): 214.862401971985
Sum of Squared Residual: 434512996.964381
Correlation Coef. (R): 0.999996411191975
R-Square: 0.999992822396829
Adjusted R-Square: 0.99999282087114
Determination Coef. (DC): 0.999991748082927
Chi-Square: -26589.2854996605
F-Statistic: 569341000.214239
Parameter Initial Value
a -20088.9862898102
b 0.0320322385142336
c 55098.3960866006
c1.jpg

John D'Errico
John D'Errico el 1 de Mzo. de 2019
Editada: John D'Errico el 1 de Mzo. de 2019
You cannot use the curve fitting toolbox to fit a model that has constraints on it like the ones you have. At least not directly.
Lets look at your model function however. The general model is:
y = a*exp(b*x) + c*exp(d*x)
Your constraints are that
y(0) = 0
y'(0) = 0
What do they mean in terms of the parameters?
y(0)=0 ==> a + b = 0
Or, we can write it as a = -b, essentially allowing us to eliminate b from the model completely. So now we can re-write the model in the form
y = a*exp(b*x) - a*exp(d*x)
Next, consider the slope boundary condition at x=0. Again, since exp(0) is 1, this reduces to:
y'(0) = 0 ==> a*b - a*c = 0
That is a problem however. Why? If we assume a is non-zero (as the problem becomes trivial if a is zero) then we now know that b == c. So we can reduce the model once more, into the form:
y(x) = a*exp(b*x) - a*exp(b*x) = 0
Does that seem problematic? It has a difference of two identical terms. So the ONLY exponential model that is a sum of exactly two exponentials of the form that you want, that also has y(0)=y-(0)=0, is the oddly trivial one:
y(x) = 0
So, can you solve this using the curve fitting toolbox? I suppose you might be able to do so, although I'm not sure how to enter a model that is constant at zero for all x.
I would strongly recommend you choose a model that does allow the required properties to hold, but also allows a fit to exist. Without seeing your data, it is very difficult to know what that model might be. For example, you might be able to use a very simple model of the form:
y(x) = a2*x.^2 + a3*x.^3 + a4*x.^4
etc. Don't go too high in the order of that model, as it will rapidly have numerical difficulties. You may need to consider scaling your data. A virtue of the model form I have suggested is it automatically forces y(0)=y'(0)=0.
My guess is that the data you have has relatively large x. So, how would I scale this problem? I would scale it as:
s = max(abs(x));
Now, solve the problem using the curve fitting toolbox by scaling x and y as:
xs = x/s;
ys = y/s^2;
ft = fittype('a2*x.^2 + a3*x.^3 + a4*x.^4','indep','x');
mdl = fit(xs(:),ys(:),ft);
Don't forget to unscale the coefficients afterwards. If you need a better recommendation for a model, you need to provide the data.
  1 comentario
Paul Van der Merwe
Paul Van der Merwe el 1 de Mzo. de 2019
Thank you, that makes a lot of sense and explains it well. However, using a polynomial as you suggest causes a warning 'Equation is badly conditioned.'
I have attached the data points, if that helps. I am trying to fit a curve to the inverted function (i.e. x = f(y)) with the boundary conditions.
An exponential fit seems the best method as I need real numbers, not complex.
Thanks for explaining so far!

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