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How can I solve this type of integration?

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Bajdar Nouredine
Bajdar Nouredine el 13 de Ag. de 2021
Comentada: Bjorn Gustavsson el 24 de Ag. de 2021
I know how to determine either double integration and summation alone, but how could I solve both together as shown in pic.

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Bjorn Gustavsson
Bjorn Gustavsson el 13 de Ag. de 2021
This seems like a natural case for a for-loop. Something like this:
your_sum_of_integrals = 0;
for j1 = 1:100
your_sum_of_integrals = your_sum_of_integrals + (p-1)^2*integral2(@(theta,y) integrand_expr - etc;
end
A simple computational solution - there might be some clever way to figure out a closed-form solution of this, but this should be enough...
HTH
  4 comentarios
Bajdar Nouredine
Bajdar Nouredine el 24 de Ag. de 2021
Editada: Bajdar Nouredine el 24 de Ag. de 2021
Dear @Bjorn Gustavsson could do you help me to plot this function?
Bjorn Gustavsson
Bjorn Gustavsson el 24 de Ag. de 2021
The way I understand your sum-of-integrals is that you integrate over y and θ and you sum such integrals over 100 values of p. That should leave you with one value for the sum without any independent variable it depends on. To make a graph you'd need some kind of variation to make it somewhat interesting, right? So what do you want to vary in this function? You could keep track of every term in the sums over p and j to make a 2-D surface/pseudo-color graph for example. But before I suggest something you'll have to explain what you want to plot...

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