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transforming matrix after change of variables

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María Jesús
María Jesús el 24 de Nov. de 2015
Respondida: Walter Roberson el 25 de Nov. de 2015
Hi,
I have a matrix M(r, t), which I would like to transform into a matrix N(x, y, t), where x = r*cos(theta), y = r*sin(theta). I would like to use this to generate a heat map using image() where it plots x against y with the color corresponding to the entry in the matrix. Is there a way to do this?
Thanks for the help!
  2 comentarios
the cyclist
the cyclist el 24 de Nov. de 2015
What is stored in M? The value at a given (r,t) location? Is it a column vector? Do you have the corresponding values of r and t stored in corresponding vectors?
María Jesús
María Jesús el 24 de Nov. de 2015
Yes, M has a value at each (r,t), it is a 100x100 array. r and t are each a 1x100 array

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Respuestas (2)

the cyclist
the cyclist el 24 de Nov. de 2015
Assuming you are using t and theta interchangeably here, then I think it should just be
x = r.*cos(t);
y = r.*sin(t);
figure
imagesc(x,y,M)
  1 comentario
María Jesús
María Jesús el 24 de Nov. de 2015
They're meant to be different. Theta runs from 0 to 2pi and t from 0 to 0.2, although the vectors do have the same size.

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Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 25 de Nov. de 2015
image() and imagesc() and imshow() only deal with rectangular matrices aligned with the X/Y axes. When you pass x or y coordinates into image() or imagesc(), only the first and last values are paid attention to.
If you want an image with nonlinear coordinates you have a few choices:
  1. pcolor() or surf() with the coordinate grids and the image data. pcolor() is exactly equivalent to surf() viewed from above. Note that the coordinates are taken to be of vertices and color is interpolated based upon the color of the vertices
  2. use patch() in texturemap mode to draw the image stretched on to the surface
  3. use a gridded interpolant and sample the function at a rectangular grid that is then an image that can be used with image() or imagesc()
  4. probably not for this case but in some cases, use one of the image transforms
  5. you might be able to use iradon()

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