Linear Interpolation listed data points on to anothe list
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I have range of measurments as shown
x_data = (0.7127, 0.6954, 0.6789, 0.6744, 0.6697, 0.6649, 0.6600, 0.6551, 0.6501, 0.6450,
0.7127, 0.7091, 0.6988, 0.6827, 0.6626, 0.6574, 0.6520, 0.6466, 0.6411, 0.6356,
0.6300, 0.6245, 0.6190)
I want to interpolate (linear) the above x data on to new unformly spaced z value given by:
z_new = 0:10/6371:0.244
Given that the x list has differnet length than the new data (z) how do we do this interpolation?
I tried this from mathworks online but not working:
"vq = interp1(x,v,xq) returns interpolated values of a 1-D function at specific query points using linear interpolation. Vector x contains the sample points, and v contains the corresponding values, v(x). Vector xq contains the coordinates of the query points"
Thank you
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Accepted Answer
Image Analyst
on 3 Dec 2023
You're mixing up x_data, x, z_new, and v. I think the nomenclature is confusing you. Try this:
x_data = [0.7127, 0.6954, 0.6789, 0.6744, 0.6697, 0.6649, 0.6600, 0.6551, 0.6501, 0.6450,...
0.7127, 0.7091, 0.6988, 0.6827, 0.6626, 0.6574, 0.6520, 0.6466, 0.6411, 0.6356,...
0.6300, 0.6245, 0.6190];
x = 1 : numel(x_data);
v = x_data;
subplot(2, 1, 1);
plot(x, v, 'b.--', 'LineWidth', 2, 'MarkerSize', 20)
grid on;
xlabel('Index', 'Interpreter','none');
ylabel('x_data', 'Interpreter','none')
% This z_new is no good since the interpolation x values are
% not in the range of x_data indexes.
z_new = 0:10/6371:0.244; % BAD!
size(z_new)
% Let's use a z_new that goes from the first index
% to the first index + 0.244, in other words in the range [1, 1.244]
% And since the original z_new had 156 points, let's use 156 points
% with the new z_new.
z_new = linspace(1, 1.244, 156);
vq = interp1(x,v,z_new);
subplot(2, 1, 2);
x = 1 : numel(vq);
plot(x, vq, 'r-', 'LineWidth', 2)
grid on;
title('vq', 'Interpreter','none');
xlabel('Index', 'Interpreter','none');
ylabel('Interpolated x_data', 'Interpreter','none')
If that is not the interpolation region you want, feel free to set the z_new range anywhere from 1 to 23 (which is the number of elements in x_data).
4 Comments
Image Analyst
on 3 Dec 2023
That does not make any sense. Please show on a numberline or a graph the actual x_data points, and the values for which you want interpolated as your output. Keep in mind that any points specified outside the range of your input data will be NaN.
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