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Home/ Questions/Q 852437
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T07:35:41+00:00 2026-05-15T07:35:41+00:00

I want to develop a lognormal distribution with range [0.42,1.19], whose few elements are

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I want to develop a lognormal distribution with range [0.42,1.19], whose few elements are given as D=[1.19,1.00,0.84,0.71,0.59,0.50,0.42]. The mean should be 0.84 and standard deviation as small as possible. Also given is that the 90% of cdf (=90% of the grains) lies between 0.59 and 1.19.

Once I know all the elements of this lognormal distribution which incorporate the given conditions I can find its pdf, which is what I require. Here are simple steps I tried:

D=[1.19,1.00,0.84,0.71,0.59,0.50,0.42];

s=0.30; % std dev of the lognormal distribution

m=0.84; % mean of the lognormal distribution

mu=log(m^2/sqrt(s^2+m^2)); % mean of the associated normal dist.

sigma=sqrt(log((s^2/m^2)+1)); % std dev of the associated normal dist.

[r,c]=size(D);

for i=1:c

D_normal(i)=mu+(sigma.*randn(1));

w(i)=(D_normal(i)-mu)/sigma; % the probability or the wt. percentage

end

sizes=exp(D_normal);
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T07:35:41+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 7:35 am

    If you have the statistics toolbox and you want to draw random values from the lognormal distribution, you can simply call LOGNRND. If you want to know the density of the lognormal distribution with a given mean and sigma at a specific value, you use LOGNPDF.

    Since you’re calculating weights, you may be looking for the density. These would be, in your example:

    weights = lognpdf([1.19,1.00,0.84,0.71,0.59,0.50,0.42],0.84,0.3)
    
    weights =
         0.095039     0.026385     0.005212   0.00079218   6.9197e-05   5.6697e-06   2.9244e-07
    

    EDIT

    If you want to know what percentage of grains falls into the range of 0.59 to 1.19, you use LOGNCDF:

    100*diff(logncdf([0.59,1.19],0.84,0.3))
    ans =
           1.3202
    

    That’s not a lot. If you plot the distribution, you’ll notice that the lognormal distribution with your values peaks a bit above 2

    x = 0:0.01:10;
    figure
    plot(x,lognpdf(x,0.84,0.3))
    
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