notes/education/math/MATH1060 (trig)/Graphing.md
2024-09-30 11:03:24 -06:00

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Sine/Cosine

A graph of sine and cosine

Given the above graph:

  • At the origin, sin(x) = 0 and cos(x) = 1
  • A full wavelength takes 2\pi

Manipulation

Formula Movement
y = cos(x) - 1 Vertical shift down by 1
y = 2cos(x) Vertical stretch by a factor of 2
y = -cos(x) Flip over x axis
y = cos(2x) Horizontal shrink by a factor of 2

Periodic Functions

A function is considered periodic if it repeats itself at even intervals, where each interval is a complete cycle, referred to as a period.

Sinusoidal Functions

A function that has the same shape as a sine or cosine wave is known as a sinusoidal function.

There are 4 general functions:

$$A * sin(B*x - C) + D$$ y = A * cos(B*x -c) + D$$
y = A * sin(B(x - \frac{C}{B})) + D y = A*cos(B(x - \frac{C}{B})) + D$$

How to find the:

  • Amplitude: |A|
  • Period: \frac{2\pi}{B}
  • Phase shift: \frac{C}{|B|}
  • Vertical shift: D
 y = A * \sin(B(x-\frac{C}{B})) 

Tangent/Cotangent

 y = tan(x) 

Graph of tangent To find relative points to create the above graph, you can use the unit circle:

If tan(x) = \frac{sin(x)}{cos(x}), then:

sin(0) = 0 cos(0) = 1 tan(0) = \frac{cos(0)}{sin(0)} = \frac{0}{1} =0
sin(\frac{\pi}{4}) = \frac{\sqrt{2}}{2} cos(\frac{\pi}{4}) = \frac{\sqrt{2}}{2} tan(\frac{\pi}{4}) = \frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}/\frac{\sqrt{2}}{2} = 1
sin(\frac{\pi}{2}) = 1 cos(\frac{\pi}{2}) = 0 tan(\frac{\pi}{2}) = \frac{1}{0} = DNF
Interpreting the above table:
  • When x = 0, y = 0
  • When x = \frac{\pi}{4}, y = 1
  • When x = \frac{\pi}{2}, there's an asymptote

Without any transformations applied, the period of tan(x) = 1. Because tan is an odd function, $

 y = cot(x) 

Graph of cotangent