Using MATLAB ODE45, numerically solve (EQ-1A) for y(t) when b = 10 and over the
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Using MATLAB ODE45, numerically solve (EQ-1A) for y(t) when b = 10 and over the time span 0 le t le 5. Assume that the system is initially at rest (all IC's equal to zero).Plot the system input, A(t), over the time values generated from your solution in Task 1. Place your results in the top position of a 2x1 subplot. Plot the system output as obtained from ODE45, y(t), over the time values generated from your solution in Task 1. Place your results in the bottom position of a 2x1 subplot. Annotate all axes and turn on the grid. Is the system stable?Explanation / Answer
MATLABMathematicsNumerical Integration and Differential EquationsOrdinary Differential Equations ode23 Solve nonstiff differential equations; low order method Syntax [T,Y] = solver(odefun,tspan,y0) [T,Y] = solver(odefun,tspan,y0,options) [T,Y,TE,YE,IE] = solver(odefun,tspan,y0,options) sol = solver(odefun,[t0 tf],y0...) This page contains an overview of the solver functions: ode23, ode45, ode113, ode15s, ode23s, ode23t, and ode23tb. You can call any of these solvers by substituting the placeholder, solver, with any of the function names. Arguments The following table describes the input arguments to the solvers. odefun A function handle that evaluates the right side of the differential equations. All solvers solve systems of equations in the form y? = f(t,y) or problems that involve a mass matrix, M(t,y)y? = f(t,y). The ode23s solver can solve only equations with constant mass matrices. ode15s and ode23t can solve problems with a mass matrix that is singular, i.e., differential-algebraic equations (DAEs). tspan A vector specifying the interval of integration, [t0,tf]. The solver imposes the initial conditions at tspan(1), and integrates from tspan(1) to tspan(end). To obtain solutions at specific times (all increasing or all decreasing), use tspan = [t0,t1,...,tf]. For tspan vectors with two elements [t0 tf], the solver returns the solution evaluated at every integration step. For tspan vectors with more than two elements, the solver returns solutions evaluated at the given time points. The time values must be in order, either increasing or decreasing. Specifying tspan with more than two elements does not affect the internal time steps that the solver uses to traverse the interval from tspan(1) to tspan(end). All solvers in the ODE suite obtain output values by means of continuous extensions of the basic formulas. Although a solver does not necessarily step precisely to a time point specified in tspan, the solutions produced at the specified time points are of the same order of accuracy as the solutions computed at the internal time points. Specifying tspan with more than two elements has little effect on the efficiency of computation, but for large systems, affects memory management. y0 A vector of initial conditions. options Structure of optional parameters that change the default integration properties. This is the fourth input argument. [t,y] = solver(odefun,tspan,y0,options) You can create options using the odeset function. See odeset for details. The following table lists the output arguments for the solvers. T Column vector of time points. Y Solution array. Each row in Y corresponds to the solution at a time returned in the corresponding row of T. TE The time at which an event occurs. YE The solution at the time of the event. IE The index i of the event function that vanishes. sol Structure to evaluate the solution. Description [T,Y] = solver(odefun,tspan,y0) with tspan = [t0 tf] integrates the system of differential equations y? = f(t,y) from time t0 to tf with initial conditions y0. The first input argument, odefun, is a function handle. The function, f = odefun(t,y), for a scalar t and a column vector y, must return a column vector f corresponding to f(t,y). Each row in the solution array Y corresponds to a time returned in column vector T. To obtain solutions at the specific times t0, t1,...,tf (all increasing or all decreasing), use tspan = [t0,t1,...,tf]. Parameterizing Functions explains how to provide additional parameters to the function fun, if necessary. [T,Y] = solver(odefun,tspan,y0,options) solves as above with default integration parameters replaced by property values specified in options, an argument created with the odeset function. Commonly used properties include a scalar relative error tolerance RelTol (1e-3 by default) and a vector of absolute error tolerances AbsTol (all components are 1e-6 by default). If certain components of the solution must be nonnegative, use the odeset function to set the NonNegative property to the indices of these components. See odeset for details. [T,Y,TE,YE,IE] = solver(odefun,tspan,y0,options) solves as above while also finding where functions of (t,y), called event functions, are zero. For each event function, you specify whether the integration is to terminate at a zero and whether the direction of the zero crossing matters. Do this by setting the 'Events' property to a function, e.g., events or @events, and creating a function [value,isterminal,direction] = events(t,y). For the ith event function in events, value(i) is the value of the function. isterminal(i) = 1, if the integration is to terminate at a zero of this event function and 0 otherwise. direction(i) = 0 if all zeros are to be computed (the default), +1 if only the zeros where the event function increases, and -1 if only the zeros where the event function decreases. Corresponding entries in TE, YE, and IE return, respectively, the time at which an event occurs, the solution at the time of the event, and the index i of the event function that vanishes. sol = solver(odefun,[t0 tf],y0...) returns a structure that you can use with deval to evaluate the solution at any point on the interval [t0,tf]. You must pass odefun as a function handle. The structure sol always includes these fields: sol.x Steps chosen by the solver. sol.y Each column sol.y(:,i) contains the solution at sol.x(i). sol.solver Solver name. If you specify the Events option and events are detected, sol also includes these fields: sol.xe Points at which events, if any, occurred. sol.xe(end) contains the exact point of a terminal event, if any. sol.ye Solutions that correspond to events in sol.xe. sol.ie Indices into the vector returned by the function specified in the Events option. The values indicate which event the solver detected. If you specify an output function as the value of the OutputFcn property, the solver calls it with the computed solution after each time step. Four output functions are provided: odeplot, odephas2, odephas3, odeprint. When you call the solver with no output arguments, it calls the default odeplot to plot the solution as it is computed. odephas2 and odephas3 produce two- and three-dimensional phase plane plots, respectively. odeprint displays the solution components on the screen. By default, the ODE solver passes all components of the solution to the output function. You can pass only specific components by providing a vector of indices as the value of the OutputSel property. For example, if you call the solver with no output arguments and set the value of OutputSel to [1,3], the solver plots solution components 1 and 3 as they are computed. For the stiff solvers ode15s, ode23s, ode23t, and ode23tb, the Jacobian matrix ?f/?y is critical to reliability and efficiency. Use odeset to set Jacobian to @FJAC if FJAC(T,Y) returns the Jacobian ?f/?y or to the matrix ?f/?y if the Jacobian is constant. If the Jacobian property is not set (the default), ?f/?y is approximated by finite differences. Set the Vectorized property 'on' if the ODE function is coded so that odefun(T,[Y1,Y2 ...]) returns [odefun(T,Y1),odefun(T,Y2) ...]. If ?f/?y is a sparse matrix, set the JPattern property to the sparsity pattern of ?f/?y, i.e., a sparse matrix S with S(i,j) = 1 if the ith component of f(t,y) depends on the jth component of y, and 0 otherwise. The solvers of the ODE suite can solve problems of the form M(t,y)y? = f(t,y), with time- and state-dependent mass matrix M. (The ode23s solver can solve only equations with constant mass matrices.) If a problem has a mass matrix, create a function M = MASS(t,y) that returns the value of the mass matrix, and use odeset to set the Mass property to @MASS. If the mass matrix is constant, the matrix should be used as the value of the Mass property. Problems with state-dependent mass matrices are more difficult: If the mass matrix does not depend on the state variable y and the function MASS is to be called with one input argument, t, set the MStateDependence property to 'none'. If the mass matrix depends weakly on y, set MStateDependence to 'weak' (the default); otherwise, set it to 'strong'. In either case, the function MASS is called with the two arguments (t,y). If there are many differential equations, it is important to exploit sparsity: Return a sparse M(t,y). Supply the sparsity pattern of ?f/?y using the JPattern property or a sparse ?f/?y using the Jacobian property. For strongly state-dependent M(t,y), set MvPattern to a sparse matrix S with S(i,j) = 1 if for any k, the (i,k) component of M(t,y) depends on component j of y, and 0 otherwise. If the mass matrix M is singular, then M(t,y)y? = f(t,y) is a system of differential algebraic equations. DAEs have solutions only when y0 is consistent, that is, if there is a vector yp0 such that M(t0,y0)yp0 = f(t0,y0). The ode15s and ode23t solvers can solve DAEs of index 1 provided that y0 is sufficiently close to being consistent. If there is a mass matrix, you can use odeset to set the MassSingular property to 'yes', 'no', or 'maybe'. The default value of 'maybe' causes the solver to test whether the problem is a DAE. You can provide yp0 as the value of the InitialSlope property. The default is the zero vector. If a problem is a DAE, and y0 and yp0 are not consistent, the solver treats them as guesses, attempts to compute consistent values that are close to the guesses, and continues to solve the problem. When solving DAEs, it is very advantageous to formulate the problem so that M is a diagonal matrix (a semi-explicit DAE).
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