Nested Numerical Integral in Matlab
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Ignas
el 11 de Dic. de 2012
Comentada: Paul
el 27 de Sept. de 2021
Hello, I am fairly new in using Matlab and was wondering if a nested numerical integral was possible. I have seen a number of other questions here where the outer variable of integration appears in the limits of the inner integral but the function being integrated over just depends on one variable. So I was wondering how or if it's possible to do, say:
z = integral( e^(-integral(f(x,y),x,0,1)),y,0,1)
3 comentarios
Babak
el 12 de Dic. de 2012
If not, what is your f(x,y) function? Can you find g(.),h(.) such that f(x,y)=g(x)*h(y)?
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Teja Muppirala
el 12 de Dic. de 2012
Rather than trying to do it all in one expression, it's much simpler if you break it up into two parts.
Step 1. Make the inner part a separate function and save it to a file.
function F = innerF(y)
F11 = integral(@(x) exp(x+y) ,0,1);
F21 = integral(@(x) exp(x-y) ,0,1);
F12 = integral(@(x) sin(x+y) ,0,1);
F22 = integral(@(x) cos(x-y) ,0,1);
F = det([F11 F12; F21 F22]);
Step 2. From the command line, call INTEGRAL to do the outer integral
integral(@innerF, 0, 1, 'ArrayValued', true)
2 comentarios
Sundar Aditya
el 28 de En. de 2017
Hi,
I was wondering how the syntax would change if the limits of x were a function of y. Specifically, the expression I need to evaluate is of the form integral( e^( -integral( f(x,y),x,0,g(y) ) ),y,0,1). This is what I tried:
integral(@(x) exp(-integral(@(x,y) f,0,@(y) y)),0,1)
where f is the function handle for f(x,y). I get the following error message:
Function 'subsindex' is not defined for values of class 'function_handle'.
I'm unable to figure out what I'm doing wrong. Any help will be greatly appreciated.
Más respuestas (2)
Richard
el 18 de Jul. de 2017
Seems to me that this is what you are looking for. I assumed a random expression for f function since you did not specify it.
f =@(x,y) x+y;
integral(@(y) exp(-integral(@(x) f(x,y),0,y)),0,1,'ArrayValued',true)
1 comentario
Roger Stafford
el 12 de Dic. de 2012
The functions 'dbsquad' and 'quad2d' are designed to numerically solve just your kind of problem. The former uses the the kind of fixed integration limits that you have described and the latter allows variable limits. Be sure to read their descriptions carefully so you can define the integrand function properly.
Roger Stafford
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