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I have created a simple pyplot of three Gaussians. Now, I want to draw a dotted straight line from the x-axis to the peak value of each Gaussian. Is this possible?

import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from scipy.stats import norm
import math

mu1 = 5
mu2 = 10
variance1 = 3
variance2 = 1
sigma1 = math.sqrt(variance1)
sigma2 = math.sqrt(variance2)

mu_combined = (variance2*mu1 + variance1*mu2)/(variance1 + variance2)
variance_combined = 1/(1/variance1 + 1/variance2)
sigma_combined = math.sqrt(variance_combined)

x = np.linspace(0,15,100)
plt.plot(x,norm.pdf(x, mu1, sigma1),'b')
plt.plot(x,norm.pdf(x, mu2, sigma2),'r')
plt.plot(x,norm.pdf(x, mu_combined, sigma_combined),'g')
plt.plot([5,5],[0,0.23],'b:')
plt.plot([10,10],[0,0.4],'r:')
plt.plot([8.7,8.7],[0,0.46],'g:')

ax = plt.gca()
ax.set_xlabel('Random Variable')
ax.set_ylabel('Probability')
plt.grid()
plt.show()

plt.savefig('Program_Path/Gaussians.svg', format='svg')
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  • You might want to look at this ( unfortunately not that easy) answer stackoverflow.com/a/49194458/803359. Will even all you to zoom in and out, you have to modify it though. If you do not care about that. other answers there might help as well. Mar 8, 2019 at 13:41
  • Most simple solution plt.plot( [ x0, x0 ], [ 0, y0 ] ), where ( x0, y0 ) is the position of your max. Mar 8, 2019 at 13:43
  • @mikuszefski: Thx a lot, man! I have included your answer to my code and it looks fine. Now I am trying to save the figure as svg. It seems to work, i.e. I get a file.svg image in my specified directory. But I cannot open it, or rather when I open the file it is empty. I know this is a different question, but do you have an idea what could be the problem?
    – Luk
    Mar 8, 2019 at 14:52
  • Yep....known thing...look here: stackoverflow.com/a/21884187/803359 Mar 8, 2019 at 15:40

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