How to find the zero crossing in x and time data sets?
271 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
vimal kumar chawda
on 9 Jun 2021
Edited: Stefan Schuberth
on 27 Jul 2022
How can I find the zero crossing in the data sets?
figure()
plot(x,t)
3 Comments
Accepted Answer
Scott MacKenzie
on 9 Jun 2021
Edited: Scott MacKenzie
on 10 Jun 2021
Here's what I put together. The variable fCross is what you are looking for.
% data from posted matlab.mat files
f = readmatrix('testdata1.txt');
t = readmatrix('testdata2.txt');
tiledlayout(3,1);
nexttile;
plot(t,f);
hold on;
axis([1 10 -1.2 1.2]);
nexttile;
fAbove = f .* (f >= 0);
fBelow = f .* (f <= 0);
area(t, fAbove, 'FaceColor', 'r');
hold on;
area(t, fBelow, 'FaceColor', 'g');
axis([1 10 -1.2 1.2]);
nexttile;
fCrossRaw = find(diff(fAbove>0));
fCross = fCrossRaw ./ length(t)*10; % as per axes
plot(fCross, zeros(1,length(fCross)), '*r');
hold on;
axis([1 10 -1.2 1.2]);
xline(fCross, 'color', [.7 .7 .7]);
yline(0, 'color', [.7 .7 .7]);
2 Comments
Scott MacKenzie
on 10 Jun 2021
@vimal kumar chawda You're welcome. I just updated my answer to make the 3rd plot look a bit better.
More Answers (2)
Stefan Schuberth
on 27 Jul 2022
Edited: Stefan Schuberth
on 27 Jul 2022
If you have (x,y) data and want to do it without using loops try that:
i=find(y(1:end-1).*y(2:end)<0); % index of zero crossings
m=(y(i+1)-y(i))./(x(i+1)-x(i)); % slope
x0=-y(i)./m+x(i); % x coordinates of zero crossings linear interpolated
0 Comments
Joel Lynch
on 9 Jun 2021
Edited: Joel Lynch
on 9 Jun 2021
idx = find( f(2:end).*f(1:end-1)<0 )
Will return the left-hand indicies of cross-over points.
To get the exact X-values where the cross-over occurs, you would have to do some linear intepolation (inverted)
t_zero = zeros(size(idx));
for i=1:numel(idx)
j = idx(i); % Need both the index in the idx/t_zero vector, and the f/t vector
t_zero(i) = interp1( f(j:j+1), t(j:j+1), 0.0, 'linear' );
end
Note: this will fail if the cross-over happens on the last i value (i+1 would extend outside the range of the dataset)
4 Comments
Scott MacKenzie
on 11 Jun 2021
Edited: Scott MacKenzie
on 29 Jun 2021
Yes, Joel's code gives the exact cross-over point. Bear in mind, however, that this is exact for the linearly interpolated data. The actual data are empirical, so it is not possible to know the exact cross-over point.
It probably doesn't matter much in this case, since the data appear to be gathered at a high sampling rate.
See Also
Categories
Find more on Surface and Mesh Plots in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!