How can I integrate a constant

I have an equation that produces a value for constant acceleration, and produces a straight line graph. I need to find the corresponding values for velocity and displacement and plot their graphs as well over a period of time. I tried using cumtrapz(a), but my values for vel and disp turn out to be zero. How can I integrate the acceleration w.r.t time?

1 Comment

Roger Stafford
Roger Stafford on 16 Nov 2016
Edited: Roger Stafford on 16 Nov 2016
For a constant acceleration, the velocity will be the initial velocity plus the constant acceleration multiplied by the time. The displacement will be the initial displacement plus the initial velocity multiplied by the time plus half the acceleration multiplied by the square of the time. Why bother with having matlab do the integration when such a simple method is available?
The time to use matlab would be with an acceleration that varies with time and/or with distance.

Sign in to comment.

Answers (1)

See if something like this does what you want:
t = 0:4; % Time Vector
Accel = 1.5 * ones(1, 5); % Acceleration Vector
Vel = cumtrapz(t, Accel); % Velocity Vector
Disp = cumtrapz(t, Vel); % Displacement Vector
figure(1)
plot(t, Accel)
hold on
plot(t, Vel)
plot(t, Disp)
hold off
grid
legend('Acceleration', 'Velocity', 'Displacement', 'Location','NW')

Categories

Find more on Mathematics in Help Center and File Exchange

Asked:

A
A
on 16 Nov 2016

Edited:

on 16 Nov 2016

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!