multiplication of infinity by zero in Matlab Calculation
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Hi,
I have a problem with the evaluation of an equation. My problem is that; one of the parts in the equation will result to infinity, and another part will result to zero. Then the product of them should give me zero BUT it gave me NAN. How I can solve this problem?
Thank you
3 Comments
  Roger Stafford
      
      
 on 18 Mar 2017
				@Jamal Ahmad. It should be noted that matlab does not decide this answer of a NaN. It is hard-wired into all computers which use the IEEE 754 floating point standard, which almost surely means your computer.
Accepted Answer
  the cyclist
      
      
 on 12 Feb 2014
        
      Edited: the cyclist
      
      
 on 12 Feb 2014
  
      The product of 0 and infinity, mathematically, is not zero. It is indeterminate. That is why it gives you a NaN.
10 Comments
  Iain
      
 on 24 Feb 2014
				You'll need to work in log-space.
 ln(exp(634)) = 634
 ln(exp(-632.2)) = -632.2
 634 + (-632.2) = 1.8
 exp(1.8) = exp(634)*exp(-632.2)
I doubt that there is an automatic way to work in logarithms rather than normal numbers.
More Answers (6)
  Patrik Ek
      
 on 12 Feb 2014
        The solution to this problem comes from the mathematical limit. 1/0 = inf is really a bit sloppy. If you remember how this was introduced in the mathematical analysis course you most likely took for many years ago you would see that the correct way to work with infinities is to work with limits for example,
lim x->0 a/x = inf, a<inf equ(1)
This is however in most cases seen as a general theorem, which allows you to write 1/0 = inf. Another way to express a<inf is to say that a is bounded. Otherwise it is unbounded, it can take any value larger than the largest real value. The same applies for,
lim x->inf b/x = 0; b<inf, equ(2)
since x->inf can be anything is could be larger than 0.00... so this still applies. But what happens if we have an expression?
lim x->0 ax*1/bx = a/b*x/x = a/b, equ(3)
You see that x cancels out and the answer is a/b. So the limit of two undefined values a*inf and 1/(b*inf) actually depends on the speed with which they go towards their limit.
The problem is that when matlab becomes inf or zero, matlab can not say how fast they apporach the limit. The obvious solution to that problem is to say that the limit can not be set, or the limit does not exist. Matlab then returns a nan for the cases
 inf/inf
 0/0
 0*inf
where equ(3) applies.
0 Comments
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 24 Feb 2014
        To make Matlab not consider exp(1000) to be infinity, overload the exp function for double datatype, and tell the function to return 42 instead of infinity when it detects that the absolute value of the argument exceeds realmax()
Good luck keeping from $%#@$'ing up other MATLAB code that expects infinity. Overloading a fundamental mathematical operation to make it lie is sure to be ... an interesting experience.
0 Comments
  David Young
      
 on 23 Feb 2014
        So x contains infinities and y contains zeros and we are willing to assume from knowledge of the earlier computation that when an infinity in x is multiplied by a zero in y, the correct answer is zero. Then it is reasonble to write:
z = x .* y;
z(isinf(x) & y == 0) = 0;
This replaces the NaNs that have been generated in this way by zeros.
2 Comments
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 23 Feb 2014
				Or more efficient,
z(y == 0) = 0;
If the inf might appear on either side,
z(~(x | y)) = 0;
  Logan Capizzi
 on 30 Nov 2021
        If you want the NaN to be zero, you can do the following. 
A(isnan(A)) = 0;
0 Comments
  Sri Vastava
 on 25 Feb 2017
        
      Edited: Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 26 Feb 2017
  
      the cyclist wrote: The product of 0 and infinity, mathematically, is not zero. It is indeterminate. That is why it gives you a NaN.
The answer is infinity.
2 Comments
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 26 Feb 2017
				Sri Vastava: are you indicating that the product of 0 and infinity is infinity? We explore above why the answer is indeterminate, not infinity.
  David Goodmanson
      
      
 on 26 Feb 2017
				
      Edited: David Goodmanson
      
      
 on 26 Feb 2017
  
			Hello Sri, It really is indeterminate.
as x -> 0,
    x -> 0  (of course)
  x^2 -> 0
  1/x is unbounded, -> inf
1/x^2 is unbounded, -> inf
now take three different expressions that are basically 0*inf:
as x-> 0
x^2 * (1/x)   = x -> 0
x   * (1/x^2) = 1/x is unbounded, -> inf
x   * (6/x)   = 6 -> 6
You can get any value that you want, so Matlab goes with the IEEE 754 standard and says NaN.
  Andrea Barletta
 on 16 Mar 2017
        I don't fully agree with previous comments on the meaning of the product between 0 and infinity. It is true that the result of 0*Inf is indeterminate when the latter is interpreted as the product between two limits - it simply doesn't make any sense if it is interpreted as a standalone expression. But the limit of 0*f(x) will always give 0, no matter where x and f(x) are going. In such case, in Matlab, we should get a genuine 0*Inf=0. Neglecting this exception may cause some issues in programming. Suppose that I have a function f defined as a function g truncated over a compact set A. Mathematically, the value f(x) should be zero for every x outside A, no matter how g is defined. But as Jamal Ahmad more or less remarked in one comment if we take
f=@(x) exp(x).*(abs(x)<=10);
and we evaluate x=1e3 we incorrectly get f(1e3)=NaN. Of course, IF using anonymous functions is not a necessity, one may overcome the problem by defining f as
function y=f(x)
if abs(x)<10
    y=exp(x);
else
    y=0;
end
end
But apparently truncation and anonymous functions don't like each other in Matlab...
9 Comments
  Andrea Barletta
 on 21 Jul 2017
				I don't see why it should be difficult to check, every time that an anonymous function is evaluated, if the defining expression is of the form (indicator function of A)*(composition, product or sum between functions belonging to a preset list of smooth and well behaved built-in functions). In this case every time that the function is evaluated outside A Matlab can safely return 0. You could say that it wouldn't be worth investing any effort on that, given that one can always use an if-else statement, but that's completely another story. Anyway, a "truncation operator" to be used within anonymous functions would be very much useful.
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 22 Jul 2017
				What might make sense could be to define false * inf as 0 . Not 0 in general, but logical(0) specifically.
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