Using Runge-Kutta in Matlab

I am trying to solve an equation dx/dt = f(x,t) where f(x,t) is a velocity. I want to solve for the positions x to obtain the trajectory x(t). I've seen that the time evolution of the positions x can be calculated using Runge-Kutta, but Matlab's implementation via ode45 (or similar) looks like it requires a function in the first argument. Here, I instead have a starting position x0 and compute the velocity at that initial point, f(x0,t0). How do I use Runge-Kutta to determine the time evolution of the position based on the velocities? If it matters, I can calculate an arbitrary instantaneous velocity f(x,t) from the forces acting on a position x. To give more context, I am calculating the velocity fxt = S*Fx where the matrix S and the force Fx both depend on the particle position, so the velocity that I calculate is a scalar.

 Accepted Answer

Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong on 23 Aug 2023
Edited: Bruno Luong on 23 Aug 2023
" I can calculate an arbitrary velocity f(x,t) from the forces acting on a position x."
Good this is a very good starting point. If you have f(x,t) in MATLAB function form,
then simply call
sol = ode45(@(t,x) f(x,t), [t0 tend], x0)
tend is the last time where you want the solution to be computed.
Read the doc of ode45

8 Comments

L'O.G.
L'O.G. on 23 Aug 2023
Edited: L'O.G. on 23 Aug 2023
@Bruno Luong The problem is the velocity f(x,t) is just something I calculate at a specific point. It's not in "function form", if I'm understanding you correctly: it's a scalar. It depends on the forces which themselves depend on the position. Doesn't that complicate things? To give context, I am calculating the velocity fxt = S*Fx where the matrix S and the force Fx both depend on the particle position.
then simply write down
function v = f(x,t)
v = S(x).*Fx(x); % you said you know how to compute S(x) and Fx(x)
end
L'O.G.
L'O.G. on 23 Aug 2023
Edited: L'O.G. on 23 Aug 2023
@Bruno Luong Thank you, and then pass that into ode45? How do I choose the time step for the method?
dx/dt = v, and v is a function of the position that is given to you in the input variables (t,x). What is the problem ?
@Torsten I only know the initial position and velocity. As mentioned, I want to determine the particle trajectory. I hope that makes sense.
ode45 adjusts the time step for you automatically. If you need solution at specific time, set tspan argument. Please read the doc in the link above.
Torsten
Torsten on 23 Aug 2023
Edited: Torsten on 23 Aug 2023
I only know the initial position and velocity. As mentioned, I want to determine the particle trajectory. I hope that makes sense.
ode45 has x - the actual position at time t - as input to your function where you define dx/dt.
Thank you, I have a follow up question that I will ask

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on 23 Aug 2023

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