ode solver returns too many results

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I am trying to solve a system of ode's with ode15s but it is not working properly. It is returning a vector of length 9 for my system of 3 ode's instead of 3 as I desire. My system looks like this
function D = mo(t,y,a,b)
dy = a*y;
dv= (a*t+1)*y;
dw = (a/b)*y;
D = [dy; dv; dw];
And this is how I am trying to solve it
x0(1) = 0.2;
x0(2)= 4;
ts = [0,1,2,3,4,5];
options = odeset('RelTol',1e-8,'AbsTol',1e-8);
[~,y] = ode15s(@(t,y) mo(t,y,x0(1),x0(2)),ts,[x0(2) 0 1],options);
I have no clue why I get this error
Error using odearguments (line 95)
@(T,Y)MO(T,Y,X0(1),X0(2)) returns a vector of length 9, but the length of initial conditions vector is 3. The vector returned by
@(T,Y)MO(T,Y,X0(1),X0(2)) and the initial conditions vector must have the same number of elements.
Edit1: I had a typo in dw
Edit2: Just for clarification the result I want to get can be retrieved with wolfram alpha:

Accepted Answer

Star Strider
Star Strider on 23 Jul 2020
The problem is that ‘y’ is a (3x1) vector, and ‘mo’ is evaluating each value for all values of ‘y’.
Perhaps you intend:
function D = mo(t,y,a,b)
dy = a*y(1);
dv= (a*t+1)*y(2);
dw = (a/b+1)*y(3);
D = [dy; dv; dw];
end
or as an anonymous function:
mo = @(t,y,a,b) [a*y(1); (a*t+1)*y(2); (a/b+1)*y(3)];
.
  2 Comments
John Miller
John Miller on 23 Jul 2020
Edited: John Miller on 23 Jul 2020
How can I avoid matlab to assume y is a (3x1) vector?
The ode I am trying to solve has the solution with dy being the time derivative and dv dw being the sensitivities for a and b
Edit: Changing the y(1),y(2),y(3) to y(1) will do the job
Star Strider
Star Strider on 23 Jul 2020
How can I avoid matlab to assume y is a (3x1) vector?
You cannot. That is how the MATLAB ODE solvers work.
The ode I am trying to solve has the solution with dy being the time derivative and dv dw being the sensitivities for a and b
I may be missing something here.
Using:
syms a b t y(t)
Eq = y == b*exp(a*t);
dEq = diff(Eq)
dEqda = diff(Eq,a)
dEqdb = diff(Eq,b)
I get:
The last two are the sensitivity functions of ‘a’ and ‘b’ (at least as I understand sensitivity functions).
What is your original differential equation?
.

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More Answers (1)

Bjorn Gustavsson
Bjorn Gustavsson on 23 Jul 2020
When you get an error in matlab instantly set the debugger on:
dbstop if error
then rerun the command that caused the error, this will give you an interactive command-line prompt at the line where the error happened in the function, in the stack of function-calls. This makes it possible to inspect the different variables in the function-workspace, and move up in the call-stack so that you can inspect the input arguments and such.
In this case you problem is that when ode15s calls the function mo it starts off with your initial conditions, converted into a column array - that is a 3 x 1 array. In the function you first calculates dy which will be a 3 x 1 array, then dv which will be a 3 x 1 array and then dw which also will be a 3 x 1 array, then these 3 arrays are concatenated to produce a 9 x 1 array.
HTH

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