Plotting two non linear equations in same graph

I have following two equations
y - ((t^8 - 8*t^7 + 36*t^6 - 96*t^5 + 146*t^4 - 88*t^3 - 116*t^2 + 144*t + 81)/(t^8 - 8*t^7 + 36*t^6 - 96*t^5 + 162*t^4 - 184*t^3 + 100*t^2 - 72*t + 162))==0,
t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y)*((3 - 2*t)/(3(2-t)))))/(sqrt(y)*(((3-t^2))/(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y)*(t/3))) ==0
but I can't seem to plot it. Here's what I did -
t= linspace(0,1);
y= linspace(0.5,1);
[X, Y] = meshgrid(t, y);
f1= @(t,y)(y - ((t^8 - 8*t^7 + 36*t^6 - 96*t^5 + 146*t^4 - 88*t^3 - 116*t^2 + 144*t + 81)/(t^8 - 8*t^7 + 36*t^6 - 96*t^5 + 162*t^4 - 184*t^3 + 100*t^2 - 72*t + 162)));
f2 = @(t,y)(t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y)*((3 - 2*t)/(3*(2-t)))))/(sqrt(y)*(((3-t^2))/(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y)*(t/3))));
surf(X, Y, f1(X, Y)) ;

 채택된 답변

Torsten
Torsten 2023년 7월 28일
t= linspace(0,1);
y= linspace(0.5,1);
[T, Y] = meshgrid(t, y);
f1 = @(t,y)(y - ((t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 146*t.^4 - 88*t.^3 - 116*t.^2 + 144*t + 81)./(t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 162*t.^4 - 184*t.^3 + 100*t.^2 - 72*t + 162)));
f2 = @(t,y)(t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y).*((3 - 2*t)./(3*(2-t)))))./(sqrt(y).*(((3-t.^2))./(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y).*(t/3))));
surf(T,Y,f1(T,Y))
hold on
surf(T,Y,f2(T,Y))

댓글 수: 14

Thank you @Torsten. If have to make legend of this graph ie want 2d version and not 3d. What should I do?
You mean plot y over t as
t = linspace(0,1);
f1 = @(t)((t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 146*t.^4 - 88*t.^3 - 116*t.^2 + 144*t + 81)./(t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 162*t.^4 - 184*t.^3 + 100*t.^2 - 72*t + 162));
figure(1)
plot(t,f1(t))
xlabel('t')
ylabel('y')
f2 = @(t,y)t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y).*((3 - 2*t)./(3*(2-t)))))./(sqrt(y).*(((3-t.^2))./(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y).*(t/3)));
figure(2)
fimplicit(f2)
xlabel('t')
ylabel('y')
Can't I have both on same graph?
t = linspace(-3.5,3);
f1 = @(t)((t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 146*t.^4 - 88*t.^3 - 116*t.^2 + 144*t + 81)./(t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 162*t.^4 - 184*t.^3 + 100*t.^2 - 72*t + 162));
f2 = @(t,y)t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y).*((3 - 2*t)./(3*(2-t)))))./(sqrt(y).*(((3-t.^2))./(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y).*(t/3)));
plot(t,f1(t))
hold on
fimplicit(f2,[-3.5 3 0 1])
hold off
xlabel('t')
ylabel('y')
Thank you!
I solved the system the following way
syms t y [soly, solt] = solve(y - ((t^8 - 8*t^7 + 36*t^6 - 96*t^5 + 146*t^4 - 88*t^3 - 116*t^2 + 144*t + 81)/(t^8 - 8*t^7 + 36*t^6 - 96*t^5 + 162*t^4 - 184*t^3 + 100*t^2 - 72*t + 162))==0, t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y)*((3 - 2*t)/(3*(2-t)))))/(sqrt(y)*(((3-t^2))/(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y)*(t/3))) ==0)
Is it correct?
syms y t
f1 = y - ((t^8 - 8*t^7 + 36*t^6 - 96*t^5 + 146*t^4 - 88*t^3 - 116*t^2 + 144*t + 81)/(t^8 - 8*t^7 + 36*t^6 - 96*t^5 + 162*t^4 - 184*t^3 + 100*t^2 - 72*t + 162));
f2 = t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y)*((3 - 2*t)/(3*(2-t)))))/(sqrt(y)*(((3-t^2))/(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y)*(t/3)));
[soly, solt] = solve([f1==0,f2==0],[y,t]);
Warning: Possibly spurious solutions.
ynum = vpa(soly);
tnum = vpa(solt);
res1 = arrayfun(@(i)vpa(subs(f1,[y t],[ynum(i) tnum(i)])),1:size(ynum,1));
res2 = arrayfun(@(i)vpa(subs(f2,[y t],[ynum(i) tnum(i)])),1:size(ynum,1));
res = [res1;res2];
sol = [];
for i = 1:size(res,2)
if abs(res(:,i)) < 1e-10
sol = [sol,[ynum(i);tnum(i)]];
end
end
%Columns of solyt are solutions for y and t. Thus there are 9 (y,t) pairs
%found that satisfy f1==0 and f2==0.
solyt = unique(sol.','rows','stable').'
solyt = 
size(solyt)
ans = 1×2
2 9
ysol = solyt(1,:);
ysol = ysol(:)
ysol = 
tsol = solyt(2,:);
tsol = tsol(:)
tsol = 
y can only have range of 0.5 to 1. How is it giving ans of 2 and 9. And when I solved through wolfram alpha I got t=1 and y= 0.990099, why Matlab is giving the opposite result. Even through substitution manually that make sense
Torsten
Torsten 2023년 7월 29일
편집: Torsten 2023년 7월 29일
The first row of "solyt" are the y-values, the second row of "solyt" are the corresponding t-values.
Should be obvious from the command
sol = [sol,[ynum(i);tnum(i)]];
And only from the aspect of real solutions, y is restricted to 0 <= y <= 1, not 0.5 <= y <= 1. Maybe you are talking about physical restrictions that I don't know of.
Okay got it! But why the plot shows y to be 1 and t to be 0.990099. And when I plot the graph I am getting 3d figure (with same command as yours)
Torsten
Torsten 2023년 7월 29일
편집: Torsten 2023년 7월 30일
We are talking about three different things in this discussion:
First thing is to plot
z = f1(t,y) = y - ((t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 146*t.^4 - 88*t.^3 - 116*t.^2 + 144*t + 81)./(t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 162*t.^4 - 184*t.^3 + 100*t.^2 - 72*t + 162))
z = f2(t,y) = t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y).*((3 - 2*t)./(3*(2-t)))))./(sqrt(y).*(((3-t.^2))./(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y).*(t/3)))
This gives two surface plots of z over t and y (plot in a 3d-frame)
Second thing is to solve
y - ((t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 146*t.^4 - 88*t.^3 - 116*t.^2 + 144*t + 81)./(t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 162*t.^4 - 184*t.^3 + 100*t.^2 - 72*t + 162)) == 0
t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y).*((3 - 2*t)./(3*(2-t)))))./(sqrt(y).*(((3-t.^2))./(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y).*(t/3))) == 0
for y. This will give two line plots of y over t (plot in a 2d-frame).
Third thing is to explicitly solve
y - ((t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 146*t.^4 - 88*t.^3 - 116*t.^2 + 144*t + 81)./(t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 162*t.^4 - 184*t.^3 + 100*t.^2 - 72*t + 162)) == 0
t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y).*((3 - 2*t)./(3*(2-t)))))./(sqrt(y).*(((3-t.^2))./(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y).*(t/3))) == 0
for t and y. This will give a handful of coordinate pairs (t,y) that satisfy both equations.
These three different interpretations are done in my three responses. I'm not certain what you are aiming at.
Points where the blue and the red curves in the line plots from the second approach meet should occur as coordinate pairs in the third part. I'm not sure which plot you mean when you say:
But why the plot shows y to be 1 and t to be 0.990099.
If I can trust my old eyes, it shows exactly the opposite.
And when I plot the graph I am getting 3d figure (with same command as yours)
Which graph do you mean ?
Second thing...
In the Attached graph, intersection happens at t=0.990099 and y= 1
No. It happens at t = 1 and y = something below 1.
Or look again at the graphs here. t is abscissa and y is ordinate !
t = linspace(-3.5,3);
f1 = @(t)((t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 146*t.^4 - 88*t.^3 - 116*t.^2 + 144*t + 81)./(t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 162*t.^4 - 184*t.^3 + 100*t.^2 - 72*t + 162));
f2 = @(t,y)t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y).*((3 - 2*t)./(3*(2-t)))))./(sqrt(y).*(((3-t.^2))./(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y).*(t/3)));
plot(t,f1(t))
hold on
fimplicit(f2,[-3.5 3 0 1])
hold off
xlabel('t')
ylabel('y')

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추가 답변 (1개)

Voss
Voss 2023년 7월 28일
Use element-wise operations (.^, ./, .*)
t= linspace(0,1);
y= linspace(0.5,1);
[X, Y] = meshgrid(t, y);
f1= @(t,y)(y - ((t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 146*t.^4 - 88*t.^3 - 116*t.^2 + 144*t + 81)./(t.^8 - 8*t.^7 + 36*t.^6 - 96*t.^5 + 162*t.^4 - 184*t.^3 + 100*t.^2 - 72*t + 162)));
f2 = @(t,y)(t - ((sqrt(y)*(2/3)- (sqrt(1 - y).*((3 - 2*t)./(3*(2-t)))))./(sqrt(y).*(((3-t.^2))./(3*(2-t))) - sqrt(1-y).*(t/3))));
surf(X, Y, f1(X, Y)) ;

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