how to solve equations ?
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hello everybody,
I have two equations with (d1,d2,L,x) variables and I want to find x in terms of (d1,d2,L) variables .I used "solve" function to do this but it gave me x in term of (d1,d2,L,z) where I have not used "z" variable in my equations, and I can't understand what is this.
This is what I did:
syms x d1 d2 l;
y1=((d2 + x)^2 - 2*l^2 + (d1 - x)^2)/(2*l*(d1 + x)^2*(d2 + x)) + ((d1^2 + 2*x*d1 + l^2)^2*(d2^2 + 2*x*d2 + l^2)^2)/(16*l^4*(d1 + x)^2*(d2 + x)^2);%y1=0
y2=((d1^2 + 2*x*d1 + l^2)^2/(4*l^2*(d1 + x)^2) - 1)*((d2^2 + 2*x*d2 + l^2)^2/(4*l^2*(d2 + x)^2) - 1); %y2=0
final_equation=y1-y2;
x=solve(final_equation,x)
any help in this regard will be appreciated
댓글 수: 2
Walter Roberson
2012년 12월 25일
Please read the guide to tags and retag this question. see http://www.mathworks.co.uk/matlabcentral/answers/43073-a-guide-to-tags
AYAH
2012년 12월 25일
답변 (1개)
Walter Roberson
2012년 12월 25일
0 개 추천
The solution for that is a quartic. There are analytic solutions, but they are very long to write out. MATLAB shows the short form of them by returning a RootOf() placeholder. RootOf(f(z),z) means "the values of z such that f(z) returns 0".
You can tell solve() to give you the complete analytic solution using the maximum degree option, but beware that it runs to numerous pages and is basically incomprehensible.
댓글 수: 2
AYAH
2012년 12월 26일
편집: Walter Roberson
2012년 12월 26일
Walter Roberson
2012년 12월 26일
Odd. Which MATLAB version are you using?
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