How to plot an Ellipse
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I want to plot an Ellipse. I have the verticles for the major axis: d1(0,0.8736) d2(85.8024,1.2157) (The coordinates are taken from another part of code so the ellipse must be on the first quadrant of the x-y axis) I also want to be able to change the eccentricity of the ellipse.
1 Comment
muhammad arfan
on 18 Jun 2019
dears!!!
i have asigned to write a matlab code for 8 point to fit it in ellipse by using least square method..
i am new in using matlab and try my best but my points are not fit on ellipse. i use annealing method so that i have satisfied my teacher by my work. please chk my work and help me.
thanks
arfan khan
clc;
clear all;
close all;
r1 = rand(1);
r2 = [1+rand(1)]; % r2>r1
x0 = 0;
y0 = 0;
N = 8;
n= 100;
x1 = 1;
x2 = 2;
y1 = 1;
y2 = 2;
for i = 1:n
x = x1 +(x2-x1).*rand(N,1);
y = y1 +(y2-y1).*rand(N,1);
f = ((((x./r1).^2) +(y./r2).^2)-1).^2;
[m,l] = min(f);
z =.001* exp(10*(1-i/n));
v = z/2;
% disp('v');
% disp(v)
x1 = x(l)*v;
x2 = x(l)*v;
% disp('x1')
% disp(x1)
% disp('x2')
% disp(x2)
% ay = v./y(l);
% by = v./y(l);
% disp(v);
%
% % hold on;
disp('f');
disp(f);
end
% plot(f,'or')
plot(x,y, '*b');
x=((x(i)-x0)*cos(z)) - ((y(i)-y0)*sin(z))
y=(x(i)-x0)*sin(z)-(y(i)-y0)*cos(z)
xa(i)=rand(1)
x(i)= a+(b-a)*rand(1);
y(i)= rand(1);
for
m(i) = ((((x).^2)/a^2) + (((y).^2)/b^2)-1).^2
end
hold on;
Accepted Answer
More Answers (5)
Azzi Abdelmalek
on 8 Sep 2013
Edited: Azzi Abdelmalek
on 12 Jun 2015
a=5; % horizontal radius
b=10; % vertical radius
x0=0; % x0,y0 ellipse centre coordinates
y0=0;
t=-pi:0.01:pi;
x=x0+a*cos(t);
y=y0+b*sin(t);
plot(x,y)
3 Comments
Ivailo Ivanov
on 14 Jan 2016
It was very simple and comprehensible.
Cynthia Dickerson
on 27 Jun 2018
Thanks! This code worked for me perfectly. :)
Sandy M
on 27 Jul 2019
Hi, I do my ellipse graph
A=10;
B=7.5;
X=-10:.1:10;
Y=(7.5/10)*(1-x^2)^(1/2)
z=-(7.5/10)*(1-x^2)^(1/2)
Plot(x,y,x,z)
Its ok but i need it in cm units cause if i change properties of figure and paper to cm i get deference’s about 3 or 5 mm How can I justify the unit
Kommi
on 24 Nov 2022
1 vote
For ellipse
>> clc
clear all
%length of major axis
a = input('please enter the length of major axis: ');
b = input('please enter the length of minor axis: ');
x1 = input('please input the x coordinate of the ellipse: ');
y1 = input('please enter the y coordinate of the ellipse: ');
t = -pi:0.01:pi;
x = x1+(a*cos(t));
y = y1+(b*sin(t));
plot(x,y);
Kate
on 24 Feb 2014
0 votes
how would you plot a ellipse with only knowing some co-ordinates on the curve and not knowing the y radius and x radius?
4 Comments
Roger Stafford
on 24 Feb 2014
That involves more work, Kate. I'll show you a first, easy step and let you struggle through the rest.
It requires a minimum of five points to uniquely determine a conic section - that is, an ellipse, a parabola, or a hyperbola. One way to approach the problem is to find a set of values A, B, C, D, E, and F such that
A*x^2 + B*x*y + C*y^2 + D*x + E*y + F
is as close to zero as possible for the points (assuming the six constants have been normalized by having the sum of their squares be unity.) With five points it should be essentially zero for each of the points. For more points, it depends on how close they all are to a valid conic section. If they actually lie on some conic, then with the appropriate constants A, B, etc., the above would also be zero at each point.
These constants can be found using matlab's 'svd' singular value decomposition function. Let x be a column vector of all the points' x-coordinates and y a column vector of their corresponding y-coordinates. Do this:
[U,S,V] = svd([x.^2,x.*y,y.^2,x,y,ones(size(x))]);
Then the desired constants will be in the vector V(:,6), namely, A = V(1,6), B = V(2,6), C = V(3,6), D = V(4,6), E = V(5,6), and F = V(6,6). These are associated with the smallest singular value in S. If that value is zero, then there is a precise match with all points.
Probably the easiest way to proceed from here on in plotting the conic section, would be to solve for y as a function of x, (or possibly x as a function of y,) in the quadratic equation
A*x^2 + B*x*y + C*y^2 + D*x + E*y + F = 0
The type of conic section is determined by the discriminant, B^2-4*A*C. If it is negative, the curve is an ellipse, if it is zero, the curve is a parabola, and if it is positive, it is a hyperbola. Recalling high school algebra, there will in general be two y solutions or none for each x, (and two x solutions or none for each y,) using the famous quadratic formula.
Making a successful plot would require a determination of the range of x (or of y) for which there are solutions and then generating a set of x values (or y values,) maybe with linspace, and making two separate plots of the two possible solutions for y (or for x).
Another approach to handling such a quadratic equation involves making the appropriate translation and rotations so as to place the equation in a standard form from which plots can readily be made. This, however, probably involves more effort than the above, though it is more informative.
Image Analyst
on 25 Feb 2014
Perhaps of some interest, if you need to find the ellipse points: http://www.ecse.rpi.edu/homepages/qji/Papers/ellipse_det_icpr02.pdf
Devi Satya Cheerla
on 12 Jun 2015
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 26 Aug 2022
in the equation of ellipse X2/a2 + Y2/b2 = 1. knowing the points on ellipse, can find a and b. then enter the code below to mathematically compute y and to plot x,y.
code:
x=(0:.01:a); # x value is from 0 to 'a' and discrete with 0.01 scale#
i=1:(a*100+1); # i is to calculate y at every discrete value. it should be for 1 i.e first x value to the last x value.. as it does not have a zero, add 1#
clear y # to clear any previous y value#
for i=1:(a*100+1)
y(i)=(b^2*(1-(x(i)^2)/a^2))^.5; #from the ellipse equation y=sqrt(b2(1-(x2/a2))#
end
plot(x,y)
hold on
plot(x,-y)
hold on
plot(-x,y)
hold on
plot(-x,-y)
Sandy M
on 27 Jul 2019
hi why u product the nmber with 100?
and, if i want the graph with cm units, what i do? cause i change garaph and paper properties but i still defreces about 4 mm when i prented it
Omar Maaroof
on 13 May 2019
0 votes
you can use
Ellipse2d
1 Comment
Walter Roberson
on 13 May 2019
MATLAB does not offer Ellipse2d plotting directly. Instead, the Symbolic Toolbox's engine, MuPAD, offers plot::Ellipse2d https://www.mathworks.com/help/symbolic/mupad_ref/plot-ellipse2d.html which can only be used from within a MuPAD notebook . R2018b was intended to be the last release that included the MuPAD notebook, but it was carried on to R2019a as well.
Using this FEX download,
[x1,y1,x2,y2, e]=deal(1,2,20,8 ,0.85); %hypothetical input
a = 1/2*sqrt((x2-x1)^2+(y2-y1)^2);
b = a*sqrt(1-e^2);
center=[x1+x2,y1+y2]/2;
theta=atan2d(y2-y1,x2-x1); %rotation angle
obj=ellipticalFit.groundtruth([], center,[a,b], theta);
plot(obj); hold on;
plot([x1,x2],[y1,y2],'xk'); hold off;
axis padded

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