Gunnar Andersson
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
8 years ago
23 gen 2017, 02:57 GMT-5
Preview plots of functions by default contain 10000 points in 1D. If you want to plot for a higher resolution, click on "Create Plot" in the Settings window's toolbar and increase the resolution in the data set that is created.
If your model contains rapidly varying functions you also have to make sure that the solver settings resolve the dynamics of the functions.
Preview plots of functions by default contain 10000 points in 1D. If you want to plot for a higher resolution, click on "Create Plot" in the Settings window's toolbar and increase the resolution in the data set that is created.
If your model contains rapidly varying functions you also have to make sure that the solver settings resolve the dynamics of the functions.
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Posted:
8 years ago
24 gen 2017, 18:30 GMT-5
Thank you Gunnar for your answer.
I clicked on the "Create plot", but I do not see anything related to resolution. How can I increase the resolution?
Also, How many time steps are enough to fully resolve a sine wave? Currently, I am using 8 time steps per each sine wave, is that enough?
Thanks,
Thank you Gunnar for your answer.
I clicked on the "Create plot", but I do not see anything related to resolution. How can I increase the resolution?
Also, How many time steps are enough to fully resolve a sine wave? Currently, I am using 8 time steps per each sine wave, is that enough?
Thanks,
Gunnar Andersson
COMSOL Employee
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
8 years ago
25 gen 2017, 02:34 GMT-5
Thank you Gunnar for your answer.
I clicked on the "Create plot", but I do not see anything related to resolution. How can I increase the resolution?
Also, How many time steps are enough to fully resolve a sine wave? Currently, I am using 8 time steps per each sine wave, is that enough?
The resolution is defined in the Grid data set used by the plot. Select the Line Graph in the 1D plot group that was created. Click on the Go to Source button in the Data section. This takes you to the data set. Expand the Resolution section and change the resolution.
8 time steps isn't enough to resolve a sine wave, try with more time steps until you're satisfied. That said, if you know that it's a sine wave with some frequency, why do you need to plot it?
[QUOTE]
Thank you Gunnar for your answer.
I clicked on the "Create plot", but I do not see anything related to resolution. How can I increase the resolution?
Also, How many time steps are enough to fully resolve a sine wave? Currently, I am using 8 time steps per each sine wave, is that enough?
[/QUOTE]
The resolution is defined in the Grid data set used by the plot. Select the Line Graph in the 1D plot group that was created. Click on the Go to Source button in the Data section. This takes you to the data set. Expand the Resolution section and change the resolution.
8 time steps isn't enough to resolve a sine wave, try with more time steps until you're satisfied. That said, if you know that it's a sine wave with some frequency, why do you need to plot it?
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
8 years ago
26 gen 2017, 14:55 GMT-5
Thank you Gunnar for your answer.
I clicked on the "Create plot", but I do not see anything related to resolution. How can I increase the resolution?
Also, How many time steps are enough to fully resolve a sine wave? Currently, I am using 8 time steps per each sine wave, is that enough?
The resolution is defined in the Grid data set used by the plot. Select the Line Graph in the 1D plot group that was created. Click on the Go to Source button in the Data section. This takes you to the data set. Expand the Resolution section and change the resolution.
8 time steps isn't enough to resolve a sine wave, try with more time steps until you're satisfied. That said, if you know that it's a sine wave with some frequency, why do you need to plot it?
Thank you again! I was just curious to know how to plot a graph with higher resolution.
Another question: Is there any way to solve this model in the frequency domain with a pulse like above? The pulse in the frequency domain will have a frequency of 1KHz (one cycle per milli-second). Each cycle composed of 200 microseconds of sine waves at 1MHz and 800 micro-seconds of zero pulse.
Thanks,
[QUOTE]
[QUOTE]
Thank you Gunnar for your answer.
I clicked on the "Create plot", but I do not see anything related to resolution. How can I increase the resolution?
Also, How many time steps are enough to fully resolve a sine wave? Currently, I am using 8 time steps per each sine wave, is that enough?
[/QUOTE]
The resolution is defined in the Grid data set used by the plot. Select the Line Graph in the 1D plot group that was created. Click on the Go to Source button in the Data section. This takes you to the data set. Expand the Resolution section and change the resolution.
8 time steps isn't enough to resolve a sine wave, try with more time steps until you're satisfied. That said, if you know that it's a sine wave with some frequency, why do you need to plot it?
[/QUOTE]
Thank you again! I was just curious to know how to plot a graph with higher resolution.
Another question: Is there any way to solve this model in the frequency domain with a pulse like above? The pulse in the frequency domain will have a frequency of 1KHz (one cycle per milli-second). Each cycle composed of 200 microseconds of sine waves at 1MHz and 800 micro-seconds of zero pulse.
Thanks,