How can I integrate a function related to the modified bessel function of the first kind?
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Thank you for reading my question!
The thing is that I'm tring to integrate a rice PDF, and it should be 1.
beta = 5 ;
sigma = 1.4/3;
distribution_func = @(x) x./sigma.^2.*exp(-(x.^2+beta.^2)./2./sigma.^2).*besseli(0,beta.*x./sigma.^2);
integral(distribution_func,0,100);
As you can see, due to  can go to Inf in a short range, besseli function can't be used.
 can go to Inf in a short range, besseli function can't be used.
 can go to Inf in a short range, besseli function can't be used.
 can go to Inf in a short range, besseli function can't be used.And I think  might be big alone, but it would be small with the scaling in distribution_func. So I try to constuct my own bessel function and it's like:
 might be big alone, but it would be small with the scaling in distribution_func. So I try to constuct my own bessel function and it's like:
 might be big alone, but it would be small with the scaling in distribution_func. So I try to constuct my own bessel function and it's like:
 might be big alone, but it would be small with the scaling in distribution_func. So I try to constuct my own bessel function and it's like:beta = 5 ;
sigma = 1.4/3;
integ_func = @(theta,x) x./sigma.^2./pi.*exp(-(x.^2+beta^2)/2/sigma^2+beta*x/sigma^2.*cos(theta));
distribution_func = @(x) integral(@(theta) integ_func(theta,x),0,pi);
integral(distribution_func,0,1);
The equation is right actually, but it seems that Integral can't be used in this way.
So I try trapz:
beta = 5 ;
sigma = 1.4/3;
integ_func = @(theta,x) x./sigma.^2./pi.*exp(-(x.^2+beta^2)/2/sigma^2+beta*x/sigma^2.*cos(theta));
distribution_func = @(x) integral(@(theta) integ_func(theta,x),0,pi);
x = 0:0.01:1e3;
y = zeros(1,length(x));
for i = 1:length(x)
    y(i) = distribution_func(x(i));
end
disp(trapz(x,y));
It' ok, but I don't like it, I think it's clumsy and inaccurate under certain situations.
The last method I may try is double integral since there is two integration in my equation.
Could you give me some advice about some easy and accurate ways to reach my goal?
Thanks in advance!!
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Accepted Answer
  Bruno Luong
      
      
 on 6 Sep 2022
        You can also "vectorize" distribution_func by applying arrayfun
beta = 5 ;
sigma = 1.4/3;
integ_func = @(theta,x) x./sigma.^2./pi.*exp(-(x.^2+beta^2)/2/sigma^2+beta*x/sigma^2.*cos(theta));
distribution_func = @(x) arrayfun(@(x)integral(@(theta) integ_func(theta,x),0,pi), x);
integral(distribution_func,0,1)
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