How to find image of a complex function with given constraints? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowDraw the image of a complex regionFinding residues of multi-dimensional complex functionsMulti-dimensional integral in the complex plane with poles and essential singularityPlotting a set of points given by a complex expressionMinkowski sum and product of 2D-regionsFind regions in which the roots of a third degree polynomial are realHow to find function existence borderPerformance of Apart with complex numbersUsing MaxValue with complex argumentHow to maximize the modulus of a multivariate complex-valued function?How to achieve faster performance on plotting complex valued functions
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How to find image of a complex function with given constraints?
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowDraw the image of a complex regionFinding residues of multi-dimensional complex functionsMulti-dimensional integral in the complex plane with poles and essential singularityPlotting a set of points given by a complex expressionMinkowski sum and product of 2D-regionsFind regions in which the roots of a third degree polynomial are realHow to find function existence borderPerformance of Apart with complex numbersUsing MaxValue with complex argumentHow to maximize the modulus of a multivariate complex-valued function?How to achieve faster performance on plotting complex valued functions
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I am very new to Mathematica. I have started learning it only last month. I would like to graph the image of some complex valued polynomials with some provided conditions. For example: $$ p(z_1,z_2,z_3)=z_1z_2^2 +z_2z_3+z_1z_3,$$ given that $|z_1|=1, |z_2|=2=|z_3|$.
complex regions
New contributor
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I am very new to Mathematica. I have started learning it only last month. I would like to graph the image of some complex valued polynomials with some provided conditions. For example: $$ p(z_1,z_2,z_3)=z_1z_2^2 +z_2z_3+z_1z_3,$$ given that $|z_1|=1, |z_2|=2=|z_3|$.
complex regions
New contributor
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
mathematica.stackexchange.com/questions/30687/…
$endgroup$
– Alrubaie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Possible duplicate of Draw the image of a complex region
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
7 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
Do you want to draw the image or do you want a symbolic-algebraic description of the image?
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
People here generally like users to post code as Mathematica code instead of just images or TeX, so they can copy-paste it. It makes it convenient for them and more likely you will get someone to help you. You may find this meta Q&A helpful
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
$begingroup$
@Michael E2, Great point! I've updated my answer to include the algebraic description as well. Thank you!
$endgroup$
– mjw
5 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I am very new to Mathematica. I have started learning it only last month. I would like to graph the image of some complex valued polynomials with some provided conditions. For example: $$ p(z_1,z_2,z_3)=z_1z_2^2 +z_2z_3+z_1z_3,$$ given that $|z_1|=1, |z_2|=2=|z_3|$.
complex regions
New contributor
$endgroup$
I am very new to Mathematica. I have started learning it only last month. I would like to graph the image of some complex valued polynomials with some provided conditions. For example: $$ p(z_1,z_2,z_3)=z_1z_2^2 +z_2z_3+z_1z_3,$$ given that $|z_1|=1, |z_2|=2=|z_3|$.
complex regions
complex regions
New contributor
New contributor
edited 2 hours ago
J. M. is slightly pensive♦
98.8k10311467
98.8k10311467
New contributor
asked 9 hours ago
XYZABCXYZABC
1161
1161
New contributor
New contributor
1
$begingroup$
mathematica.stackexchange.com/questions/30687/…
$endgroup$
– Alrubaie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Possible duplicate of Draw the image of a complex region
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
7 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
Do you want to draw the image or do you want a symbolic-algebraic description of the image?
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
People here generally like users to post code as Mathematica code instead of just images or TeX, so they can copy-paste it. It makes it convenient for them and more likely you will get someone to help you. You may find this meta Q&A helpful
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
$begingroup$
@Michael E2, Great point! I've updated my answer to include the algebraic description as well. Thank you!
$endgroup$
– mjw
5 hours ago
add a comment |
1
$begingroup$
mathematica.stackexchange.com/questions/30687/…
$endgroup$
– Alrubaie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Possible duplicate of Draw the image of a complex region
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
7 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
Do you want to draw the image or do you want a symbolic-algebraic description of the image?
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
People here generally like users to post code as Mathematica code instead of just images or TeX, so they can copy-paste it. It makes it convenient for them and more likely you will get someone to help you. You may find this meta Q&A helpful
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
$begingroup$
@Michael E2, Great point! I've updated my answer to include the algebraic description as well. Thank you!
$endgroup$
– mjw
5 hours ago
1
1
$begingroup$
mathematica.stackexchange.com/questions/30687/…
$endgroup$
– Alrubaie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
mathematica.stackexchange.com/questions/30687/…
$endgroup$
– Alrubaie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Possible duplicate of Draw the image of a complex region
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
7 hours ago
$begingroup$
Possible duplicate of Draw the image of a complex region
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
7 hours ago
1
1
$begingroup$
Do you want to draw the image or do you want a symbolic-algebraic description of the image?
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
$begingroup$
Do you want to draw the image or do you want a symbolic-algebraic description of the image?
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
1
1
$begingroup$
People here generally like users to post code as Mathematica code instead of just images or TeX, so they can copy-paste it. It makes it convenient for them and more likely you will get someone to help you. You may find this meta Q&A helpful
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
$begingroup$
People here generally like users to post code as Mathematica code instead of just images or TeX, so they can copy-paste it. It makes it convenient for them and more likely you will get someone to help you. You may find this meta Q&A helpful
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
$begingroup$
@Michael E2, Great point! I've updated my answer to include the algebraic description as well. Thank you!
$endgroup$
– mjw
5 hours ago
$begingroup$
@Michael E2, Great point! I've updated my answer to include the algebraic description as well. Thank you!
$endgroup$
– mjw
5 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
On the boundary of the image the Jacobian will be singular:
Clear[r, s, t];
Block[z1 = Exp[I r], z2 = 2 Exp[I s], z3 = 2 Exp[I t],
expr = ComplexExpand[ReIm[z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3]]
]
(*
4 Cos[r + 2 s] + 2 Cos[r + t] + 4 Cos[s + t],
4 Sin[r + 2 s] + 2 Sin[r + t] + 4 Sin[s + t]
*)
D[expr, r, s, t]; (* Jacobian is 2 x 3 *)
Equal @@ Divide @@ % // Simplify (* It's singular if the rows are proportional *)
sub = r + t -> u, s + t -> v, r + 2 s -> w;
% /. sub // Simplify
(* Solve cannot solve the system, unless we cut it into bite-size pieces *)
solv = Solve[%[[;; 2]], v] /. C[1] -> 0;
%%[[2 ;;]] /. % // Simplify;
solu = Solve[#, u] & /@ %;
(*
-((2 Sin[r + 2 s] + Sin[r + t])/(2 Cos[r + 2 s] + Cos[r + t])) ==
-((2 Sin[r + 2 s] + Sin[s + t])/(2 Cos[r + 2 s] + Cos[s + t])) ==
-((Sin[r + t] + 2 Sin[s + t])/(Cos[r + t] + 2 Cos[s + t]))
-((Sin[u] + 2 Sin[w])/(Cos[u] + 2 Cos[w])) ==
-((Sin[v] + 2 Sin[w])/(Cos[v] + 2 Cos[w])) ==
-((Sin[u] + 2 Sin[v])/(Cos[u] + 2 Cos[v]))
*)
(* fix sub so that it works on a general expression *)
invsub = First@ Solve[Equal @@@ sub, u, v, w];
sub = First@ Solve[Equal @@@ invsub, r, s, t];
(* some u solutions are complex *)
realu = List /@ Cases[Flatten@solu, _?(FreeQ[#, Complex] &)];
boundaries = PiecewiseExpand /@
Simplify[
TrigExpand@Simplify[Simplify[expr /. sub] /. solv] /. realu //
Flatten[#, 1] &, 0 <= w < 2 Pi];
ParametricPlot[boundaries // Evaluate, w, 0, 2 Pi]
Well, it's only a start, since you have to check in the interior boundaries to see whether they might be holes. But @HenrikSchumacher has done that already.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Amazing idea to look for critical points of the Jacobian. Good job!
$endgroup$
– Henrik Schumacher
4 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
By letting $z_1,z_2,z_3$ trace out circles, we can see some beautiful curves that live within that blob!
p[z1_, z2_, z3_] := z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3;
q[t_][a1_, a2_, b1_, b2_, c1_, c2_] :=
p[Exp[ I (a1 t + a2)], 2 Exp[ I (b1 t + b2)], 2 Exp[ I (c1 t + c2)]];
Manipulate[
ParametricPlot[Re[q[ t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]],
Im[q[ t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]], t, 0, 2 [Pi],
Axes -> False, Frame -> True, PlotRange -> -12, 12,-12, 12],
a1, -5, 5,a2, 0, 2 [Pi],b1, -5, 5,b2, 0, 2 [Pi],
c1, -5, 5,c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
Here is a look at the analytical form of these curves:
Manipulate[
ComplexExpand@ReIm[q[t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]],
a1, -5, 5, a2, 0, 2 [Pi], b1, -5, 5, b2, 0, 2 [Pi],
c1, -5, 5, c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
or
Manipulate[
FullSimplify[q[t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]], a1, -5, 5, a2, 0,
2 [Pi], b1, -5, 5, b2, 0, 2 [Pi], c1, -5, 5, c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Not very elegant, but this might give you a coarse idea.
z1 = Exp[I r];
z2 = 2 Exp[I s];
z3 = 2 Exp[I t];
expr = ComplexExpand[ReIm[z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3]];
f = r, s, t [Function] Evaluate[expr];
R = DiscretizeRegion[Cuboid[-1, -1, -1 Pi, 1, 1, 1 Pi],
MaxCellMeasure -> 0.0125];
pts = f @@@ MeshCoordinates[R];
triangles = MeshCells[R, 2, "Multicells" -> True][[1]];
Graphics[
Red, Disk[0, 0, 10],
FaceForm[Black], EdgeForm[Thin],
GraphicsComplex[pts, triangles]
,
Axes -> True
]
Could be the disk of radius 10...
$endgroup$
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
On the boundary of the image the Jacobian will be singular:
Clear[r, s, t];
Block[z1 = Exp[I r], z2 = 2 Exp[I s], z3 = 2 Exp[I t],
expr = ComplexExpand[ReIm[z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3]]
]
(*
4 Cos[r + 2 s] + 2 Cos[r + t] + 4 Cos[s + t],
4 Sin[r + 2 s] + 2 Sin[r + t] + 4 Sin[s + t]
*)
D[expr, r, s, t]; (* Jacobian is 2 x 3 *)
Equal @@ Divide @@ % // Simplify (* It's singular if the rows are proportional *)
sub = r + t -> u, s + t -> v, r + 2 s -> w;
% /. sub // Simplify
(* Solve cannot solve the system, unless we cut it into bite-size pieces *)
solv = Solve[%[[;; 2]], v] /. C[1] -> 0;
%%[[2 ;;]] /. % // Simplify;
solu = Solve[#, u] & /@ %;
(*
-((2 Sin[r + 2 s] + Sin[r + t])/(2 Cos[r + 2 s] + Cos[r + t])) ==
-((2 Sin[r + 2 s] + Sin[s + t])/(2 Cos[r + 2 s] + Cos[s + t])) ==
-((Sin[r + t] + 2 Sin[s + t])/(Cos[r + t] + 2 Cos[s + t]))
-((Sin[u] + 2 Sin[w])/(Cos[u] + 2 Cos[w])) ==
-((Sin[v] + 2 Sin[w])/(Cos[v] + 2 Cos[w])) ==
-((Sin[u] + 2 Sin[v])/(Cos[u] + 2 Cos[v]))
*)
(* fix sub so that it works on a general expression *)
invsub = First@ Solve[Equal @@@ sub, u, v, w];
sub = First@ Solve[Equal @@@ invsub, r, s, t];
(* some u solutions are complex *)
realu = List /@ Cases[Flatten@solu, _?(FreeQ[#, Complex] &)];
boundaries = PiecewiseExpand /@
Simplify[
TrigExpand@Simplify[Simplify[expr /. sub] /. solv] /. realu //
Flatten[#, 1] &, 0 <= w < 2 Pi];
ParametricPlot[boundaries // Evaluate, w, 0, 2 Pi]
Well, it's only a start, since you have to check in the interior boundaries to see whether they might be holes. But @HenrikSchumacher has done that already.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Amazing idea to look for critical points of the Jacobian. Good job!
$endgroup$
– Henrik Schumacher
4 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
On the boundary of the image the Jacobian will be singular:
Clear[r, s, t];
Block[z1 = Exp[I r], z2 = 2 Exp[I s], z3 = 2 Exp[I t],
expr = ComplexExpand[ReIm[z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3]]
]
(*
4 Cos[r + 2 s] + 2 Cos[r + t] + 4 Cos[s + t],
4 Sin[r + 2 s] + 2 Sin[r + t] + 4 Sin[s + t]
*)
D[expr, r, s, t]; (* Jacobian is 2 x 3 *)
Equal @@ Divide @@ % // Simplify (* It's singular if the rows are proportional *)
sub = r + t -> u, s + t -> v, r + 2 s -> w;
% /. sub // Simplify
(* Solve cannot solve the system, unless we cut it into bite-size pieces *)
solv = Solve[%[[;; 2]], v] /. C[1] -> 0;
%%[[2 ;;]] /. % // Simplify;
solu = Solve[#, u] & /@ %;
(*
-((2 Sin[r + 2 s] + Sin[r + t])/(2 Cos[r + 2 s] + Cos[r + t])) ==
-((2 Sin[r + 2 s] + Sin[s + t])/(2 Cos[r + 2 s] + Cos[s + t])) ==
-((Sin[r + t] + 2 Sin[s + t])/(Cos[r + t] + 2 Cos[s + t]))
-((Sin[u] + 2 Sin[w])/(Cos[u] + 2 Cos[w])) ==
-((Sin[v] + 2 Sin[w])/(Cos[v] + 2 Cos[w])) ==
-((Sin[u] + 2 Sin[v])/(Cos[u] + 2 Cos[v]))
*)
(* fix sub so that it works on a general expression *)
invsub = First@ Solve[Equal @@@ sub, u, v, w];
sub = First@ Solve[Equal @@@ invsub, r, s, t];
(* some u solutions are complex *)
realu = List /@ Cases[Flatten@solu, _?(FreeQ[#, Complex] &)];
boundaries = PiecewiseExpand /@
Simplify[
TrigExpand@Simplify[Simplify[expr /. sub] /. solv] /. realu //
Flatten[#, 1] &, 0 <= w < 2 Pi];
ParametricPlot[boundaries // Evaluate, w, 0, 2 Pi]
Well, it's only a start, since you have to check in the interior boundaries to see whether they might be holes. But @HenrikSchumacher has done that already.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Amazing idea to look for critical points of the Jacobian. Good job!
$endgroup$
– Henrik Schumacher
4 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
On the boundary of the image the Jacobian will be singular:
Clear[r, s, t];
Block[z1 = Exp[I r], z2 = 2 Exp[I s], z3 = 2 Exp[I t],
expr = ComplexExpand[ReIm[z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3]]
]
(*
4 Cos[r + 2 s] + 2 Cos[r + t] + 4 Cos[s + t],
4 Sin[r + 2 s] + 2 Sin[r + t] + 4 Sin[s + t]
*)
D[expr, r, s, t]; (* Jacobian is 2 x 3 *)
Equal @@ Divide @@ % // Simplify (* It's singular if the rows are proportional *)
sub = r + t -> u, s + t -> v, r + 2 s -> w;
% /. sub // Simplify
(* Solve cannot solve the system, unless we cut it into bite-size pieces *)
solv = Solve[%[[;; 2]], v] /. C[1] -> 0;
%%[[2 ;;]] /. % // Simplify;
solu = Solve[#, u] & /@ %;
(*
-((2 Sin[r + 2 s] + Sin[r + t])/(2 Cos[r + 2 s] + Cos[r + t])) ==
-((2 Sin[r + 2 s] + Sin[s + t])/(2 Cos[r + 2 s] + Cos[s + t])) ==
-((Sin[r + t] + 2 Sin[s + t])/(Cos[r + t] + 2 Cos[s + t]))
-((Sin[u] + 2 Sin[w])/(Cos[u] + 2 Cos[w])) ==
-((Sin[v] + 2 Sin[w])/(Cos[v] + 2 Cos[w])) ==
-((Sin[u] + 2 Sin[v])/(Cos[u] + 2 Cos[v]))
*)
(* fix sub so that it works on a general expression *)
invsub = First@ Solve[Equal @@@ sub, u, v, w];
sub = First@ Solve[Equal @@@ invsub, r, s, t];
(* some u solutions are complex *)
realu = List /@ Cases[Flatten@solu, _?(FreeQ[#, Complex] &)];
boundaries = PiecewiseExpand /@
Simplify[
TrigExpand@Simplify[Simplify[expr /. sub] /. solv] /. realu //
Flatten[#, 1] &, 0 <= w < 2 Pi];
ParametricPlot[boundaries // Evaluate, w, 0, 2 Pi]
Well, it's only a start, since you have to check in the interior boundaries to see whether they might be holes. But @HenrikSchumacher has done that already.
$endgroup$
On the boundary of the image the Jacobian will be singular:
Clear[r, s, t];
Block[z1 = Exp[I r], z2 = 2 Exp[I s], z3 = 2 Exp[I t],
expr = ComplexExpand[ReIm[z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3]]
]
(*
4 Cos[r + 2 s] + 2 Cos[r + t] + 4 Cos[s + t],
4 Sin[r + 2 s] + 2 Sin[r + t] + 4 Sin[s + t]
*)
D[expr, r, s, t]; (* Jacobian is 2 x 3 *)
Equal @@ Divide @@ % // Simplify (* It's singular if the rows are proportional *)
sub = r + t -> u, s + t -> v, r + 2 s -> w;
% /. sub // Simplify
(* Solve cannot solve the system, unless we cut it into bite-size pieces *)
solv = Solve[%[[;; 2]], v] /. C[1] -> 0;
%%[[2 ;;]] /. % // Simplify;
solu = Solve[#, u] & /@ %;
(*
-((2 Sin[r + 2 s] + Sin[r + t])/(2 Cos[r + 2 s] + Cos[r + t])) ==
-((2 Sin[r + 2 s] + Sin[s + t])/(2 Cos[r + 2 s] + Cos[s + t])) ==
-((Sin[r + t] + 2 Sin[s + t])/(Cos[r + t] + 2 Cos[s + t]))
-((Sin[u] + 2 Sin[w])/(Cos[u] + 2 Cos[w])) ==
-((Sin[v] + 2 Sin[w])/(Cos[v] + 2 Cos[w])) ==
-((Sin[u] + 2 Sin[v])/(Cos[u] + 2 Cos[v]))
*)
(* fix sub so that it works on a general expression *)
invsub = First@ Solve[Equal @@@ sub, u, v, w];
sub = First@ Solve[Equal @@@ invsub, r, s, t];
(* some u solutions are complex *)
realu = List /@ Cases[Flatten@solu, _?(FreeQ[#, Complex] &)];
boundaries = PiecewiseExpand /@
Simplify[
TrigExpand@Simplify[Simplify[expr /. sub] /. solv] /. realu //
Flatten[#, 1] &, 0 <= w < 2 Pi];
ParametricPlot[boundaries // Evaluate, w, 0, 2 Pi]
Well, it's only a start, since you have to check in the interior boundaries to see whether they might be holes. But @HenrikSchumacher has done that already.
answered 4 hours ago
Michael E2Michael E2
150k12203482
150k12203482
$begingroup$
Amazing idea to look for critical points of the Jacobian. Good job!
$endgroup$
– Henrik Schumacher
4 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Amazing idea to look for critical points of the Jacobian. Good job!
$endgroup$
– Henrik Schumacher
4 hours ago
$begingroup$
Amazing idea to look for critical points of the Jacobian. Good job!
$endgroup$
– Henrik Schumacher
4 hours ago
$begingroup$
Amazing idea to look for critical points of the Jacobian. Good job!
$endgroup$
– Henrik Schumacher
4 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
By letting $z_1,z_2,z_3$ trace out circles, we can see some beautiful curves that live within that blob!
p[z1_, z2_, z3_] := z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3;
q[t_][a1_, a2_, b1_, b2_, c1_, c2_] :=
p[Exp[ I (a1 t + a2)], 2 Exp[ I (b1 t + b2)], 2 Exp[ I (c1 t + c2)]];
Manipulate[
ParametricPlot[Re[q[ t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]],
Im[q[ t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]], t, 0, 2 [Pi],
Axes -> False, Frame -> True, PlotRange -> -12, 12,-12, 12],
a1, -5, 5,a2, 0, 2 [Pi],b1, -5, 5,b2, 0, 2 [Pi],
c1, -5, 5,c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
Here is a look at the analytical form of these curves:
Manipulate[
ComplexExpand@ReIm[q[t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]],
a1, -5, 5, a2, 0, 2 [Pi], b1, -5, 5, b2, 0, 2 [Pi],
c1, -5, 5, c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
or
Manipulate[
FullSimplify[q[t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]], a1, -5, 5, a2, 0,
2 [Pi], b1, -5, 5, b2, 0, 2 [Pi], c1, -5, 5, c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
By letting $z_1,z_2,z_3$ trace out circles, we can see some beautiful curves that live within that blob!
p[z1_, z2_, z3_] := z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3;
q[t_][a1_, a2_, b1_, b2_, c1_, c2_] :=
p[Exp[ I (a1 t + a2)], 2 Exp[ I (b1 t + b2)], 2 Exp[ I (c1 t + c2)]];
Manipulate[
ParametricPlot[Re[q[ t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]],
Im[q[ t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]], t, 0, 2 [Pi],
Axes -> False, Frame -> True, PlotRange -> -12, 12,-12, 12],
a1, -5, 5,a2, 0, 2 [Pi],b1, -5, 5,b2, 0, 2 [Pi],
c1, -5, 5,c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
Here is a look at the analytical form of these curves:
Manipulate[
ComplexExpand@ReIm[q[t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]],
a1, -5, 5, a2, 0, 2 [Pi], b1, -5, 5, b2, 0, 2 [Pi],
c1, -5, 5, c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
or
Manipulate[
FullSimplify[q[t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]], a1, -5, 5, a2, 0,
2 [Pi], b1, -5, 5, b2, 0, 2 [Pi], c1, -5, 5, c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
By letting $z_1,z_2,z_3$ trace out circles, we can see some beautiful curves that live within that blob!
p[z1_, z2_, z3_] := z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3;
q[t_][a1_, a2_, b1_, b2_, c1_, c2_] :=
p[Exp[ I (a1 t + a2)], 2 Exp[ I (b1 t + b2)], 2 Exp[ I (c1 t + c2)]];
Manipulate[
ParametricPlot[Re[q[ t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]],
Im[q[ t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]], t, 0, 2 [Pi],
Axes -> False, Frame -> True, PlotRange -> -12, 12,-12, 12],
a1, -5, 5,a2, 0, 2 [Pi],b1, -5, 5,b2, 0, 2 [Pi],
c1, -5, 5,c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
Here is a look at the analytical form of these curves:
Manipulate[
ComplexExpand@ReIm[q[t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]],
a1, -5, 5, a2, 0, 2 [Pi], b1, -5, 5, b2, 0, 2 [Pi],
c1, -5, 5, c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
or
Manipulate[
FullSimplify[q[t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]], a1, -5, 5, a2, 0,
2 [Pi], b1, -5, 5, b2, 0, 2 [Pi], c1, -5, 5, c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
$endgroup$
By letting $z_1,z_2,z_3$ trace out circles, we can see some beautiful curves that live within that blob!
p[z1_, z2_, z3_] := z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3;
q[t_][a1_, a2_, b1_, b2_, c1_, c2_] :=
p[Exp[ I (a1 t + a2)], 2 Exp[ I (b1 t + b2)], 2 Exp[ I (c1 t + c2)]];
Manipulate[
ParametricPlot[Re[q[ t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]],
Im[q[ t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]], t, 0, 2 [Pi],
Axes -> False, Frame -> True, PlotRange -> -12, 12,-12, 12],
a1, -5, 5,a2, 0, 2 [Pi],b1, -5, 5,b2, 0, 2 [Pi],
c1, -5, 5,c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
Here is a look at the analytical form of these curves:
Manipulate[
ComplexExpand@ReIm[q[t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]],
a1, -5, 5, a2, 0, 2 [Pi], b1, -5, 5, b2, 0, 2 [Pi],
c1, -5, 5, c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
or
Manipulate[
FullSimplify[q[t][a1, a2, b1, b2, c1, c2]], a1, -5, 5, a2, 0,
2 [Pi], b1, -5, 5, b2, 0, 2 [Pi], c1, -5, 5, c2, 0, 2 [Pi]]
edited 4 hours ago
answered 4 hours ago
mjwmjw
1,20810
1,20810
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Not very elegant, but this might give you a coarse idea.
z1 = Exp[I r];
z2 = 2 Exp[I s];
z3 = 2 Exp[I t];
expr = ComplexExpand[ReIm[z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3]];
f = r, s, t [Function] Evaluate[expr];
R = DiscretizeRegion[Cuboid[-1, -1, -1 Pi, 1, 1, 1 Pi],
MaxCellMeasure -> 0.0125];
pts = f @@@ MeshCoordinates[R];
triangles = MeshCells[R, 2, "Multicells" -> True][[1]];
Graphics[
Red, Disk[0, 0, 10],
FaceForm[Black], EdgeForm[Thin],
GraphicsComplex[pts, triangles]
,
Axes -> True
]
Could be the disk of radius 10...
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Not very elegant, but this might give you a coarse idea.
z1 = Exp[I r];
z2 = 2 Exp[I s];
z3 = 2 Exp[I t];
expr = ComplexExpand[ReIm[z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3]];
f = r, s, t [Function] Evaluate[expr];
R = DiscretizeRegion[Cuboid[-1, -1, -1 Pi, 1, 1, 1 Pi],
MaxCellMeasure -> 0.0125];
pts = f @@@ MeshCoordinates[R];
triangles = MeshCells[R, 2, "Multicells" -> True][[1]];
Graphics[
Red, Disk[0, 0, 10],
FaceForm[Black], EdgeForm[Thin],
GraphicsComplex[pts, triangles]
,
Axes -> True
]
Could be the disk of radius 10...
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Not very elegant, but this might give you a coarse idea.
z1 = Exp[I r];
z2 = 2 Exp[I s];
z3 = 2 Exp[I t];
expr = ComplexExpand[ReIm[z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3]];
f = r, s, t [Function] Evaluate[expr];
R = DiscretizeRegion[Cuboid[-1, -1, -1 Pi, 1, 1, 1 Pi],
MaxCellMeasure -> 0.0125];
pts = f @@@ MeshCoordinates[R];
triangles = MeshCells[R, 2, "Multicells" -> True][[1]];
Graphics[
Red, Disk[0, 0, 10],
FaceForm[Black], EdgeForm[Thin],
GraphicsComplex[pts, triangles]
,
Axes -> True
]
Could be the disk of radius 10...
$endgroup$
Not very elegant, but this might give you a coarse idea.
z1 = Exp[I r];
z2 = 2 Exp[I s];
z3 = 2 Exp[I t];
expr = ComplexExpand[ReIm[z1 z2^2 + z2 z3 + z1 z3]];
f = r, s, t [Function] Evaluate[expr];
R = DiscretizeRegion[Cuboid[-1, -1, -1 Pi, 1, 1, 1 Pi],
MaxCellMeasure -> 0.0125];
pts = f @@@ MeshCoordinates[R];
triangles = MeshCells[R, 2, "Multicells" -> True][[1]];
Graphics[
Red, Disk[0, 0, 10],
FaceForm[Black], EdgeForm[Thin],
GraphicsComplex[pts, triangles]
,
Axes -> True
]
Could be the disk of radius 10...
edited 4 hours ago
answered 5 hours ago
Henrik SchumacherHenrik Schumacher
58.7k581162
58.7k581162
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
$begingroup$
mathematica.stackexchange.com/questions/30687/…
$endgroup$
– Alrubaie
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Possible duplicate of Draw the image of a complex region
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
7 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
Do you want to draw the image or do you want a symbolic-algebraic description of the image?
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
People here generally like users to post code as Mathematica code instead of just images or TeX, so they can copy-paste it. It makes it convenient for them and more likely you will get someone to help you. You may find this meta Q&A helpful
$endgroup$
– Michael E2
6 hours ago
$begingroup$
@Michael E2, Great point! I've updated my answer to include the algebraic description as well. Thank you!
$endgroup$
– mjw
5 hours ago