Hoping to find the zero of J0(x) in the interval 0 ≤ x ≤ π, we might try the statement 
 z = fzerotx(@besselj,[0 pi],0)
This is legal usage of a function handle, and of fzerotx, but it produces z = 3.1416. Why? 


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if i directly use besselj function, it is display zero at 2.4048
  1 Comment
John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 27 Sep 2017
Edited: John D'Errico on 27 Sep 2017
The question asks you to think. What are the arguments to besselj? If you don't know, why not read the help for besselj? What is fzerotx? (We don't have it, so how can we know?) What do the arguments to fzerotx mean? When you call besselj itself, how did you call it?

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Answers (1)

Eeshan Mitra
Eeshan Mitra on 29 Sep 2017
It depends on how you implement the function "fzerotx" as John points out. I'm assuming it is a custom function you have written to calculate zeros for a (possibly nonlinear) function.
x = 2.4048 is infact a zero which can be validated from the plot in the following code:
X = 0:0.1:pi;
J = besselj(0,X);
plot(X,J,'LineWidth',1.5)
axis([0 pi -1 1])
grid on
To find zeros using the MATLAB function fzero instead, enter the following at the MATLAB Command Window: (Use an initial guess of 3.14 to see if it detects a zero there)
>> fzero(@(X) besselj(0,X),3.14)
ans =
2.4048
If you wish to use your custom function to calculate zeros, it might help to set debug the execution using break points.

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