Nonlinear differential equation with unknown parameter
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Hello,
I am writing this question because I have a problem with a differential equation of order 4 with an unknown parameter noted V :
I have 5 boundary conditions to apply :
I am applying a shooting method : I have found a recent discussion (Solving a 6th order non-linear differential equation in Matlab) and I have tried to implement the method for my problem since I found in the documentation that the solver "bvp4c" can take into consideration an unknown parameter :
V = 0.5;
y_init = [1;0;2;0]; % conditions initiales
psi = linspace(0,200,100);
solinit = bvpinit(eta,y_init,V);
sol = bvp4c(@core, @boundary, solinit);
psi = sol.x;
F = sol.y(1,:);
% Affichage du resultat
figure()
plot(eta,F,'--','linewidth',2,'Color','r');
% Parametre ?
fprintf('Unknown parameter is approximately %7.3f.\n',sol.parameters)
function dF = core(psi,F,V)
dF=[F(2:4);
((psi*V*F(2))-V*F(1)-(3*F(2)*F(4)*F(1)^2))/F(1)^3];
end
function res = boundary(ya,yb,V)
res = [ya(1)-1; ya(2); ya(4); yb(2)-1; yb(3)];
end
Unfortunately, I donit obtain the good result because i know that the value of V should be 0.88 : also the plotting obtained changes a lot if I change my interval...
If possible I need help.
Have a nice day.
3 Comments
Torsten
on 12 Apr 2022
I am applying a shooting method
No, you are applying a finite-difference method.
Karl Zero
on 12 Apr 2022
Torsten
on 12 Apr 2022
No, you didn't make a mistake, I guess.
But in the discussion of (Solving a 6th order non-linear differential equation in Matlab), we didn't yet succeed to get a stable solution, and you also have an ODE of degree 4 which makes things quite difficult.
Answers (2)
Seems your problem is easier than the one discussed under (Solving a 6th order non-linear differential equation in Matlab)
format long
bc0 = [1.0] %guess for H''(0)
V0 = [2.0]; % Guess for V
p = [bc0,V0];
%p=[0.6323 0.7456] %eta=10
%p=[0.6369 0.7566] %eta=15
%p=[0.6369 0.7566] %eta=20
%p=[0.6562 0.8037] %eta=25
%p=[0.6608 0.8150] %eta=30
%p=[0.6641 0.8231] %eta=40
%p=[0.6643 0.8236] %eta=50
%p=[0.6637 0.8222] %eta=60
%p=[0.6627 0.8198] %eta=80
%p=[0.6705 0.8392] %eta=120
%p=[0.6688 0.8348] %eta=160
%p=[0.6828 0.8701] %eta=200
%p=[0.689030205524681 0.886117860845706] %eta=250
%p=[0.689018898033062 0.886088749625027] %eta=275
%p=[0.689014752596432 0.886078071923821] %eta=300
%p=[0.689013817771355 0.886075659784428] %eta=325
%p=[0.689012647439617 0.886072642654987] %eta=350
%p=[0.689012439215454 0.886072105009582] %eta=375
%p=[0.689012345124427 0.886071857377161] %eta=400
%p=[0.689012324301630 0.886071797757327] %eta=450
%p=[0.689012318896960 0.886071781172971] %eta=500
p=[0.689012317389282 0.886071776014365] %eta=550
etaspan = [0 600];
p = fsolve(@(bc)fun(bc,etaspan),p) % Adjusting the initial condition for H''(0) at eta = 0
bc_total = [1;0;p(1);0];
V = p(2);
[eta,H] = ode45(@(eta,H)fun_ode(eta,H,V),etaspan,bc_total);
plot(eta,H(:,1))
% Creating residuals for the shooting method
function res = fun(p,etaspan)
bc_total = [1;0;p(1);0];
V = p(2);
etaspan_ode = [etaspan(1),etaspan(2)];
[eta,H] = ode45(@(eta,H)fun_ode(eta,H,V),etaspan_ode,bc_total);
res(1) = H(end,2)-1.0; % Deviation of H' from 1 at eta = Inf
res(2) = H(end,3); % Deviation of H'' from 0 at eta = Inf
end
% System of 1-st order ODE
function dHdeta = fun_ode(eta,H,V)
dHdeta=[H(2);H(3);H(4);(-V*H(1)+V*eta*H(2)-3*H(1)^2*H(2)*H(4))/H(1)^3];
end
8 Comments
Karl Zero
on 12 Apr 2022
I didn't get what was particularly wrong in my previous code ?
Nothing. But you said it didn't work as you wanted.
Maybe starting with the solution from my code will also make your code give results as expected.
p(1) = H''(0) and p(2) = V in my code.
For these problems, everything depends on good initial guesses for the unknowns.
Karl Zero
on 13 Apr 2022
My code says:
When I used psi = linspace(0,10), the solution with my code was H''(0) = 0.6323, V= 0.7456,
when I used psi = linspace(0,20), the solution with my code was H''(0) = 0.6369, V = 0.7566
and so on.
So you can try setting e.g.
psi = linspace(0,10,100);
y_init = [1.0;0;0.6323;0]; % conditions initiales
V = 0.7456;
and see if your code reproduces these values for H'' and V.
Karl Zero
on 13 Apr 2022
But the solution at psi = linspace(0,10) : [0.6323; 0.7456] was obtained after the calculation with the guessing : [2.0;1.0] ?
Yes. But you have the code - you can check it by yourself.
What do you get if you start with [0.6323; 0.7456] instead of [2.0;1.0] for psi = 10 ?
Karl Zero
on 14 Apr 2022
Bruno Luong
on 14 Apr 2022
Edited: Bruno Luong
on 14 Apr 2022
@Karl Zero Torsen does not run MATLAB and bvp4c (he uses octave), he cannot answer on problem with your code.
Bruno Luong
on 14 Apr 2022
Edited: Bruno Luong
on 14 Apr 2022
Solving up to PsiMax = 1000; which returns V = 0.823. Still not recommended to set PsiMax too large, just to show a more robust code by iterating on the psi span (avoid non linearity) and rescaling so that the problem is better conditioned:
function tata
clear
close all
V = 0.5;
Finit = [1;0;2;0]; % conditions initiales
PsiFinal = 1000;
nbiter = round(10+4*log(PsiFinal));
PsiFinaltab = logspace(log10(1),log10(PsiFinal),nbiter);
N = length(Finit);
for k=1:nbiter
fprintf('iteration %d/%d\n', k, nbiter);
psi = linspace(0,PsiFinaltab(k),100);
psiscale = max(PsiFinaltab(k),1);
xi = psi/psiscale;
Ginit = Finit .* psiscale.^(0:N-1)';
solinit = bvpinit(xi,Ginit,V);
try
sol = bvp5c(@(xi,G,V) fun_ode(xi,G,V,psiscale), ...
@(ya,yb,V) boundary(ya,yb,V,psiscale), solinit);
catch
continue
end
Finit = sol.y(:,1) ./ psiscale.^(0:N-1)';
V = sol.parameters;
end
xi = sol.x;
psi = psiscale*xi;
F = sol.y(1,:);
V = sol.parameters;
fprintf('Unknown parameter is approximately %7.3f.\n', V);
% Affichage du resultat
figure()
plot(psi,F,'--','linewidth',2,'Color','r');
end
function dG = fun_ode(xi,G,V,psiscale)
psi = xi*psiscale;
N = length(G);
F = G ./ (psiscale).^(0:N-1)';
dF=[F(2:4);
psi*V*F(2)/F(1)^3-V/F(1)^2-3*F(2)*F(4)/F(1)];
dG = dF .* (psiscale).^(1:N)';
end
function res = boundary(ya,yb,V,psiscale)
N = length(ya);
ya = ya ./ (psiscale).^(0:N-1)';
yb = yb ./ (psiscale).^(0:N-1)';
res = [ya([1,2,4]); yb(2:3)]-[1;0;0;1;0];
w = [1; 1; 1; 1; 1];
res = res .* w;
end

4 Comments
Torsten
on 14 Apr 2022
Slope of function at PsiFinal should be 1.
Maybe you forgot to rescale your result for F ?
Bruno Luong
on 14 Apr 2022
@Torsten I do rescale.
yb = yb ./ (psiscale).^(0:N-1)'
Torsten
on 14 Apr 2022
From the plot, it seems that the slope at Infinity is only about 5/1000 instead of 1.
Bruno Luong
on 14 Apr 2022
The solution is not find with precision or does not exist, not because of the set-up.
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