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How can I display data with large absolute range in a 3D surface plot?

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Bryan Cannon
Bryan Cannon el 11 de Jun. de 2019
Comentada: Star Strider el 12 de Jun. de 2019
I've been trying to create a surface plot of data collected from a surface depth recording and am having trouble figuring out how to scale my Z data so it can fit on the plot. Not sure how to link the exact data (comes from an hd5 .datx file), but relevant info below:
  • The max range of my Z data is 1.7977e+308
  • x and y dimensions are a 1024 x 1024 meshgrid
[X, Y] = meshgrid(1:1024, 1:1024)
  • Attempting to run
surf(X, Y, Z)
  • I get a "Limits are too large" error
Any advice on what would be the best way to scale my Z data in order to dsipaly it on the surface plot? Thanks!

Respuestas (1)

Star Strider
Star Strider el 11 de Jun. de 2019
If all your Z data are greater than zero, taking the natural or base-10 logarithm could be an option, unless some other transformation is appropriate.
  2 comentarios
Bryan Cannon
Bryan Cannon el 12 de Jun. de 2019
Mm I think I'd have to adjust the negative values I have. There seems to be an issue with the data conversion itself so I may need to figure out how to extract and convert the z data to a usable data type first. Appreciate the help!
Star Strider
Star Strider el 12 de Jun. de 2019
My pleasure!
One option is to simply divide them by a constant, perhaps 1E+100.
Another is to use a modified version of the tanh function to scale the amplitudes:
x = linspace(-1E+300, 1E+300, 10);
y = 1E+100*tanh(x/1E+300);
figure
plot(x, y)

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