Polynomial Interpolation in Matlab

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Hei!
Can somebody help me with polynomial Interpolation in Matlab? I have a data set for x and y as vectors and N=15 as the order of polynomial.T o compute coefficient c I do as follows:
x=data(1,:);
>> y=data(2,:);
c=polyfit(x,n,14);
My question is what coefficient c is?
regards, Sergey
  1 Comment
Charles Garner
Charles Garner on 26 Sep 2020
my understanding is that C is arbitrary. Pick you own value.

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Accepted Answer

the cyclist
the cyclist on 10 May 2015
The output of polyfit is described in the very first sentence of the documentation here. Have you read that, and not understood it?
Also, in your code, what is n? Given how you have defined x and y, I would have expected your polynomial fit to be done with
polyfit(x,y,14)
Finally, I'm curious what your application of this is. I can't think of one where the fitting of a 15th-order polynomial is a good idea.
  4 Comments
Star Strider
Star Strider on 10 May 2015
There must be a mathematical model of ethanol equilibrium available that estimates far fewer than 14 parameters from your 15 sets of data. Use that model, and fit it with one of the nonlinear parameter estimation functions (for example, nlinfit). It will give you a relatively accurate description of the process, and the estimated parameters will have physical meaning. As John has mentioned, throwing a 14-degree polynomial at it will likely confuse you more than enlighten you.
Charles Garner
Charles Garner on 26 Sep 2020
I am a co-author of a US Patent that uses curve fiitting. I think it is roughly 5th order. Patent #5706215. Related also to US Patent #5530925 In my telecom world, generally anything higher than 5 order isn't neccesary. You can play with it but it's not helpful.

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More Answers (1)

Joan Triadó
Joan Triadó on 4 Feb 2022
polynomial coefficients in descending powers

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