Finding the zeros of a function

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Giacomo De Angelis
Giacomo De Angelis on 12 Nov 2020
I need to find the roots of this function within a big interval:
y = x * cot (x) - 1- gamma * x^2 - ((w * delta * x^2) / (w- x^2))
gamma, delta and w are three parameters (in particular gamma=delta=0.01 and w=10 000).
Firstly, I tried to use the Newton-Ruphson's method, and it is quite good when I consider small interval, but considering big interval, like 0<x<200, it jumps some roots.
Any suggestions?
  4 Comments
John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 13 Nov 2020
Since you don't show the code you have a problem with, we need to peer into your mind, inside your computer. Sadly, the crystal ball toolbox is on the fritz today.
Giacomo De Angelis
Giacomo De Angelis on 13 Nov 2020
Don't worry, I solved the problem by myself.

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Answers (1)

John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 12 Nov 2020
That is the expected behavior of a method like NR. Sorry, but it is. Seriously, NR is literally the WRONG way to try to solve such a problem.
Instead, use a search, evaluating the function at a sequence of points, closely spaced enough to insure that all roots will lie between some pair of points.
If the function changes sign, then use fzero on the pair of points that bracket the root you just found.
DON'T WRITE YOUR OWN CODE FOR A ROOT FINDER! While your teacher may have taught you how to do so, they always seem to forget to tell you the most important thing: use existing well written code to do the real work. Don't write your own numerical methods software. Learn how the tools work. That is a good thing. But then stop. Use the proper tools that already exist.

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