Plot always appears as a straight line

v = [0:100];
m = 4.65*10.^-26;
y = ((m*v)/(4.14*10.^-21)).*exp((-m*v.^2)/2*4.14*10.^-21);
plot(v,y)
title('Density fucntion at t1 and t2')
Hi, I don't know how to fix this but my graph appears to be a straight line intead of an exponential curve. Thanks a lot!

1 Comment

@Hieu. Here's a demonstration of why you should be careful with how you use parentheses:
x = 60/5*12
y = 60/(5*12)
z = 60/5/12
Notice that in 'y' and 'z' there is division by 12, whereas in 'x' it is multiplied. That is apparently the source of your difficulty with the quantity 4.14*10.^-21. It was multiplied rather than divided because you left out the all-important parentheses.

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 Accepted Answer

Are you sure the second "4.14*10.^-21" doesn't belong in the denominator:
y = ((m*v)/(4.14*10.^-21)).*exp((-m*v.^2)/(2*4.14*10.^-21));
If so, and if you change the range of v to:
v = [0:1000];
you will get a nicely curved plot.

2 Comments

Let's define that quantity as A. I am trying to plot this function: f(x) = ((mx)/A) * exp((-mv^2)/2A). I still get a straight line.
Greg
Greg on 4 Dec 2017
Edited: Greg on 4 Dec 2017
Did you put the parenthesis around 2.*A?

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More Answers (1)

First, I suspect you missed parenthesis is your exp denominator. The magic of using constants. Second, most functions look like straight lines if you stay near the origin. Try plotting further out in v.
v = 0:1000;
m = 4.65*10.^-26;
denom = (4.14*10.^-21);
y = ((m*v)/denom).*exp((-m*v.^2)/(2*denom));
a = axes(figure);
plot(a,v,y);
title('Density function at t1 and t2')

2 Comments

I see. Thanks a lot! One of the reasons I am not fond of matlab sometimes.
Greg
Greg on 4 Dec 2017
Edited: Greg on 4 Dec 2017
That has nothing to do with MATLAB. That's a mathematical given.
Also, it was unfair to accept my answer. It was identical, and 10 minutes later than, Roger Stafford's answer.
Please unaccept mine and accept his.

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