plot phase angle in radian

subplot(2,2,1)
%chi=1; alpha=2; lambda=0.25
%eta=0
p1=0.00139;
%eta=10
p2=-0.01262;
theta_rad = p1*pi/180; % Degrees-To-Radians
polar(theta_rad, 'r.')
%title('Phase Angle')
title('$\chi=1.0, \quad \eta=0.0$','Interpreter','latex','FontSize',10,'FontName','Times New Roman','FontWeight','Normal')
%==========================================================
subplot(2,2,2)
theta_rad = p2*pi/180; % Degrees-To-Radians
polar(theta_rad, 'r.')
%title('Phase Angle')
title('$ \chi=1.0, \quad \eta=10.0$','Interpreter','latex','FontSize',10,'FontName','Times New Roman','FontWeight','Normal')
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
subplot(2,2,3)
%alpha=2; lambda=0.25
%eta=0
p3=0.02877;
%eta=10
p4=0.25253;
theta_rad = p3*pi/180; % Degrees-To-Radians
polar(theta_rad, 'r.')
%title('Phase Angle')
title('$\chi=10.0, \quad \eta=0.0$','Interpreter','latex','FontSize',10,'FontName','Times New Roman','FontWeight','Normal')
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
subplot(2,2,4)
theta_rad = p4*pi/180; % Degrees-To-Radians
polar(theta_rad, 'r.')
%title('Phase Angle')
title('$ \chi=10.0, \quad \eta=10.0$','Interpreter','latex','FontSize',10,'FontName','Times New Roman','FontWeight','Normal')

6 Comments

I am not sure what the question is? Are you asking to have the polar plot labeled in radians instead of degrees?
I recalculate the above as the following? my question now what are the values that appear on the figure
subplot(2,2,1)
%chi=1; alpha=2; lambda=0.25
%eta=0
p1=0.00139;
%eta=10
p2=-0.01262;
theta_rad = p1*pi/180; % Degrees-To-Radians
polar(theta_rad, 'r.')
%title('Phase Angle')
title('$\chi=1.0, \quad \eta=0.0$','Interpreter','latex','FontSize',10,'FontName','Times New Roman','FontWeight','Normal')
%==========================================================
subplot(2,2,2)
theta_rad = p2*pi/180; % Degrees-To-Radians
polar(theta_rad, 'r.')
%title('Phase Angle')
title('$ \chi=1.0, \quad \eta=10.0$','Interpreter','latex','FontSize',10,'FontName','Times New Roman','FontWeight','Normal')
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
subplot(2,2,3)
%alpha=2; lambda=0.25
%eta=0
p3=0.02877;
%eta=10
p4=0.25253;
theta_rad = p3*pi/180; % Degrees-To-Radians
polar(theta_rad, 'r.')
%title('Phase Angle')
title('$\chi=10.0, \quad \eta=0.0$','Interpreter','latex','FontSize',10,'FontName','Times New Roman','FontWeight','Normal')
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
subplot(2,2,4)
theta_rad = p4*pi/180; % Degrees-To-Radians
polar(theta_rad, 'r.')
%title('Phase Angle')
title('$ \chi=10.0, \quad \eta=10.0$','Interpreter','latex','FontSize',10,'FontName','Times New Roman','FontWeight','Normal')
I asked about the yellow highlighted in the attached figure
Yes?
You are using polar() with a single parameter. The default when you pass a single parameter to polar() is to treat the input as radii, with equally-spaced angles (dividing a full circle by the number of radii passed in.)
The numbers you outlined in yellow are the radii you passed in. You converted some input value to radians according to your comments, so the radius of each polar plot represents radians for something. That all seems like something that you might want to do, so I do not see what you would like to have happen differently ?
I asked about the highlighted numbers only. you clearified.Thanks.
To be more correct, the yellow numbers are linear spaced from 0 to the maximum value you asked to plot.

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Answers (1)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 9 Aug 2021
If the question is about switching the polar plot degrees to radians, then change your calls to polar() to instead be calls to polarplot(), and set the option 'ThetaAxisUnits', 'radians'

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on 8 Aug 2021

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