Solving 4 equations with 4 unknowns

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Petr
Petr 2012 年 11 月 25 日
Hi,
I would use a little help. I have 4 equations with 4 unknowns and I need to solve them to get the answer to the 4 unknowns. How can I do that ? I have no idea how to do that in Matlab.
I tried to use "solve" function but I m getting no answer...How are you doing that ? I bet a lot of people have many applications where do the same of simillar thing...
I used:
%syms x y z T;
%x = solve(eq1, 'x');
%y = solve(eq2, 'y');
%z = solve(eq3, 'z');
%T = solve(eq4, 'T');
for extracting the specific unknown but I don't know what to do next...
and than I tried this with no solution...
syms x y z T
S = solve(eq1, eq2, eq3, eq4)
Thanks, Peter
  6 件のコメント
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson 2012 年 11 月 25 日
So the error is not in the solve() call itself, right?
What does
class(sol)
show?
If it shows up as a structure, try
char(sol.x)
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson 2012 年 11 月 25 日
That set of equations has no solutions. If you solve the first two parts to get x and y, and substitute that into the third and fourth part, the z drops out of both parts. You can solve for t, and the answers will be consistent. The implication is that you only really have three different equations, and z can be anything.

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Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson 2012 年 11 月 25 日
We need more information about the form of the equations.
Not every set of equations has a solution, even for simple linear algebra -- the set might be rank deficient.
More complicated equations might be beyond the analytical ability of MuPAD to resolve, or there might be no method at all to find analytical solutions (e.g., polynomials of degree 5 and higher are not certain to have any analytical solution.)
Equations involving trig are usually difficult to solve analytically.

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