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polynomial function 3D

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Hello,
I would like to put a second order polynomial function through 9 points. The points are given in the form P(x,y,z).
Goal:
(1) Calculate polynomial function
(2) Calculate the mean curvature (= second derivative) of the function
Is there something similar to "p = polyfit(x,y,z,n)"?
Remark:
I can put a circle through three points in space and calculate the corresponding curvature of the circle. For this I use "circlefit3d(p1,p2,p3)". But I don't want to use only 3 of the 9 points for the curvature calculation.
I would be very pleased about a feedback.
  3 Comments
Christoph Thorwartl
Christoph Thorwartl on 29 Jan 2021
3D markers were fixed on the surface of an object (in a row). A force is applied to the object which causes it to bend. The bending line does not have a completely homogeneous curvature.
Christoph Thorwartl
Christoph Thorwartl on 29 Jan 2021
Picture see attached.

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Accepted Answer

Bjorn Gustavsson
Bjorn Gustavsson on 29 Jan 2021
You have the file exchange contribution polyfitn that should do what you want.
HTH

More Answers (1)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 29 Jan 2021
Is there something similar to "p = polyfit(x,y,z,n)"?
No. However, polyfit() constructs the Vandermode companion matrix and then uses \ for linear least squared computation of the coefficients. You can do the same thing;
X = x(:); Y = Y(:); Z = Z(:);
A = [X.^2, X.*Y, Y.^2, X, Y, ones(size(X))];
b = Z;
A\b
Assuming a*x^2 + b*x*y + c*y^2 + d*x + e*y + f = z .
In particular, assuming that there is no z^2 or x*z or y*z .
If there are higher order z, then at the moment I am not sure how to set up the problem without ending up with a companion matrix and all zeros on the right hand side, which unfortunately leads you to an all-zero solution instead of something useful.
  1 Comment
Christoph Thorwartl
Christoph Thorwartl on 29 Jan 2021
Thank you very much for your answer. I will now look at both approaches in detail.

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