Numerical Precision Physics Calculations

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I believe I may be encountering issues related to the numerical precision, but my understanding is limited so I wanted to ask the community. Hopefully I'm misunderstanding and someone can clarify!
I have a physics problem where I'm working with weak spatially varying magnetic fields, and calculating their response to conductive materials. For example, one calculation may involve a vector of doubles which range from 3e-7 to 4.9e-12 multiplied by one which has values of 0 or 5.89e7.
eps(5.89e7)
ans = 7.4506e-09
does this mean that all values below that eps value behave as zeros because there isn't sufficient precision for the calculation? Or do calculations work with say 4.9 *5.89 then e-12 *e7 seperately?

Accepted Answer

Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang on 25 Aug 2022
Edited: Fangjun Jiang on 25 Aug 2022
eps(5.89e7)
ans = 7.4506e-09
It means that around 5.89e7 (which is a large value), the nearest values that can be represeted by double data type is 5.89e7+7.4506e-09 or 5.89e7-7.4506e-09. So you can see the minimal incremental value of 7.4506e-09 is quite small.
eps('double')
ans = 2.2204e-16
Since you are using the default double data type, there should be no problem representing your multiplication in the range of
5.89e7*4.9e-12
ans = 2.8861e-04
  1 Comment
ADSW121365
ADSW121365 on 25 Aug 2022
Edited: ADSW121365 on 25 Aug 2022
My confusion arose from that first part. If I were to add my vectors, 5.89e7 + 4.9e-12, the calculation would be below the minimal incremental value & therefore the difference between the 5.89e7 and the result would not be represented.
I'm glad to know this doesn't impact multiplications, thank you.

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