numpy.
polyfit
Least squares polynomial fit.
Note
This forms part of the old polynomial API. Since version 1.4, the new polynomial API defined in numpy.polynomial is preferred. A summary of the differences can be found in the transition guide.
numpy.polynomial
Fit a polynomial p(x) = p[0] * x**deg + ... + p[deg] of degree deg to points (x, y). Returns a vector of coefficients p that minimises the squared error in the order deg, deg-1, … 0.
p(x) = p[0] * x**deg + ... + p[deg]
The Polynomial.fit class method is recommended for new code as it is more stable numerically. See the documentation of the method for more information.
Polynomial.fit
x-coordinates of the M sample points (x[i], y[i]).
(x[i], y[i])
y-coordinates of the sample points. Several data sets of sample points sharing the same x-coordinates can be fitted at once by passing in a 2D-array that contains one dataset per column.
Degree of the fitting polynomial
Relative condition number of the fit. Singular values smaller than this relative to the largest singular value will be ignored. The default value is len(x)*eps, where eps is the relative precision of the float type, about 2e-16 in most cases.
Switch determining nature of return value. When it is False (the default) just the coefficients are returned, when True diagnostic information from the singular value decomposition is also returned.
Weights to apply to the y-coordinates of the sample points. For gaussian uncertainties, use 1/sigma (not 1/sigma**2).
If given and not False, return not just the estimate but also its covariance matrix. By default, the covariance are scaled by chi2/dof, where dof = M - (deg + 1), i.e., the weights are presumed to be unreliable except in a relative sense and everything is scaled such that the reduced chi2 is unity. This scaling is omitted if cov='unscaled', as is relevant for the case that the weights are 1/sigma**2, with sigma known to be a reliable estimate of the uncertainty.
cov='unscaled'
Polynomial coefficients, highest power first. If y was 2-D, the coefficients for k-th data set are in p[:,k].
p[:,k]
Present only if full = True. Residuals is sum of squared residuals of the least-squares fit, the effective rank of the scaled Vandermonde coefficient matrix, its singular values, and the specified value of rcond. For more details, see linalg.lstsq.
full
linalg.lstsq
Present only if full = False and cov`=True. The covariance matrix of the polynomial coefficient estimates. The diagonal of this matrix are the variance estimates for each coefficient. If y is a 2-D array, then the covariance matrix for the `k-th data set are in V[:,:,k]
V[:,:,k]
The rank of the coefficient matrix in the least-squares fit is deficient. The warning is only raised if full = False.
The warnings can be turned off by
>>> import warnings >>> warnings.simplefilter('ignore', np.RankWarning)
See also
polyval
Compute polynomial values.
Computes a least-squares fit.
scipy.interpolate.UnivariateSpline
Computes spline fits.
Notes
The solution minimizes the squared error
in the equations:
x[0]**n * p[0] + ... + x[0] * p[n-1] + p[n] = y[0] x[1]**n * p[0] + ... + x[1] * p[n-1] + p[n] = y[1] ... x[k]**n * p[0] + ... + x[k] * p[n-1] + p[n] = y[k]
The coefficient matrix of the coefficients p is a Vandermonde matrix.
polyfit issues a RankWarning when the least-squares fit is badly conditioned. This implies that the best fit is not well-defined due to numerical error. The results may be improved by lowering the polynomial degree or by replacing x by x - x.mean(). The rcond parameter can also be set to a value smaller than its default, but the resulting fit may be spurious: including contributions from the small singular values can add numerical noise to the result.
RankWarning
Note that fitting polynomial coefficients is inherently badly conditioned when the degree of the polynomial is large or the interval of sample points is badly centered. The quality of the fit should always be checked in these cases. When polynomial fits are not satisfactory, splines may be a good alternative.
References
Wikipedia, “Curve fitting”, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curve_fitting
Wikipedia, “Polynomial interpolation”, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polynomial_interpolation
Examples
>>> import warnings >>> x = np.array([0.0, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0]) >>> y = np.array([0.0, 0.8, 0.9, 0.1, -0.8, -1.0]) >>> z = np.polyfit(x, y, 3) >>> z array([ 0.08703704, -0.81349206, 1.69312169, -0.03968254]) # may vary
It is convenient to use poly1d objects for dealing with polynomials:
poly1d
>>> p = np.poly1d(z) >>> p(0.5) 0.6143849206349179 # may vary >>> p(3.5) -0.34732142857143039 # may vary >>> p(10) 22.579365079365115 # may vary
High-order polynomials may oscillate wildly:
>>> with warnings.catch_warnings(): ... warnings.simplefilter('ignore', np.RankWarning) ... p30 = np.poly1d(np.polyfit(x, y, 30)) ... >>> p30(4) -0.80000000000000204 # may vary >>> p30(5) -0.99999999999999445 # may vary >>> p30(4.5) -0.10547061179440398 # may vary
Illustration:
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt >>> xp = np.linspace(-2, 6, 100) >>> _ = plt.plot(x, y, '.', xp, p(xp), '-', xp, p30(xp), '--') >>> plt.ylim(-2,2) (-2, 2) >>> plt.show()