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The General

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Page 1: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

The General

Page 2: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x.

y = sin 2x

y = sin 2x

y = sin x

It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast. It does one complete cycle in half the time so the period becomes .

Page 3: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

What do you think will happen to the graph if we put a fraction in front?

y = sin 1/2 xy = sin x

The period for one complete cycle is twice as long or 4

xy2

1sin

24

Page 4: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

So if we look at y = sin Bx the B affects the period.

The period P = 2

B

This will be true for cosine as well.

What is the period of y = cos 4x?2

4 2P

This means the graph will "cycle" every /2 or 4 times as often y = cos 4x

y = cos x

Page 5: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

What will the graph look like if we put a multiple of as the coefficient?

y = sin 2x

The period for one complete cycle is

sin 2y x

y = sin x

2π= 1

1 1 1

Page 6: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

absolute value of A is the amplitude

Period is 2 divided by B

Phase shift is C when in the form x – C

Vertical translation is D

cosy A B x C D

siny A B x C D

Page 7: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

Steps for graphing: siny A B x C D

Determine the amplitude

Determine the period

Mark 4 intervals with last being the period

Determine the phase shift

Put a point for max, zero or min for each 1/4

Shift each point by the phase shift C

Shift each point vertically by D

amplitude = absolute value of A

period = 2/B

divide the period by 4 to know how long the intervals are

phase shift = C

The function must be written in the form shown to use this. If it is not, you can algebraically modify it.

Page 8: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

Steps for graphing: 3sin 2 1y x

Determine the amplitude

Determine the period

Mark 4 intervals with last being the period

A = 3

Determine the phase shift

Mark max, zero or min for each 1/4

2

2P

Period is , so each interval is /4

phase shift is 2

sine would start at (0,0) but is shifted right by and up 1

2

Shift each interval by the phase shift

3sin 2 12

x Factor out a 2 from the stuff in

parenthesis to get the right form

Shift each point vertically by D

D = 1

Page 9: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

Many physical phenomena can be modeled with sine waves.

the swinging of a pendulum

radio and television waves

light and sound waves

These are often described in terms of how often they cycle. This is called the frequency and is the reciprocal of the period.

Page 10: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

Curve Fitting

If the scatter diagram of observed data looks like a sinusoidal function, we'll use the following sine function to model the observed data:

siny A B x C D

We'll need to determine A, B, C and D.

Let's look at some data and go through the steps of how to find the constants.

Page 11: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

Month, x

Ave Temp °F

Jan, 1 29.7

Feb, 2 33.4

Mar, 3 39.0

Apr, 4 48.2

May, 5 57.2

Jun, 6 66.9

Jul, 7 73.5

Aug, 8 71.4

Sep, 9 62.3

Oct, 10 51.4

Nov, 11 39.0

Dec, 12 31.0

Here is the data for average monthly temperatures in Denver, Colorado. Average over many years does not vary much from year to year so will repeat each year. The scatter plot shows 2 years.

We'll build a model using:

x

y

siny A B x C D

Page 12: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

siny A B x C D

x

y

How to find AMonth, x

Ave Temp °F

Jan, 1 29.7

Feb, 2 33.4

Mar, 3 39.0

Apr, 4 48.2

May, 5 57.2

Jun, 6 66.9

Jul, 7 73.5

Aug, 8 71.4

Sep, 9 62.3

Oct, 10 51.4

Nov, 11 39.0

Dec, 12 31.0

2

valuedatasmallest - valuedatalargest Amplitude

21.9

21.9

x

y

We have the amplitude but need to vertically shift so we'll now find D.

2

29.7 - 73.5 Amplitude

Page 13: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

siny A B x C D

How to find DMonth, x

Ave Temp °F

Jan, 1 29.7

Feb, 2 33.4

Mar, 3 39.0

Apr, 4 48.2

May, 5 57.2

Jun, 6 66.9

Jul, 7 73.5

Aug, 8 71.4

Sep, 9 62.3

Oct, 10 51.4

Nov, 11 39.0

Dec, 12 31.0

1.65

21.9

x

y

2

29.7 73.5 Shift Vertical

1.65

x

y

2

valuedatasmallest valuedatalargest Shift Vertical

Good vertically but we see that we also need a horizontal stretch since the period isn't right so we'll now find B.

Page 14: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

siny A B x C D

How to find BMonth, x

Ave Temp °F

Jan, 1 29.7

Feb, 2 33.4

Mar, 3 39.0

Apr, 4 48.2

May, 5 57.2

Jun, 6 66.9

Jul, 7 73.5

Aug, 8 71.4

Sep, 9 62.3

Oct, 10 51.4

Nov, 11 39.0

Dec, 12 31.0 21.9

x

y

1.65

x

y

Okay---so the period looks right but we need a horizontal phase shift so we'll find C

Since this cycles yearly we know the period is 12.

212P

B

2

12 6B

6

x

y

Page 15: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

1 sin (1 )6

C

How to find CMonth, x

Ave Temp °F

Jan, 1 29.7

Feb, 2 33.4

Mar, 3 39.0

Apr, 4 48.2

May, 5 57.2

Jun, 6 66.9

Jul, 7 73.5

Aug, 8 71.4

Sep, 9 62.3

Oct, 10 51.4

Nov, 11 39.0

Dec, 12 31.0

We'll substitute in a known x and y and solve for C in the equation we've built so far.

29.7 21.9sin 1 51.66

C

21.9 21.9sin 16

C

Subtract

this

Divide by this

What angle has a sine value of -1?2

This angle must equal 2

16 2

C

61

2C

4C

Page 16: The General. What happens to the graph of a sine function if we put a coefficient on the x. y = sin 2x y = sin x It makes the graph "cycle" twice as fast

siny A B x C D

Month, x

Ave Temp °F

Jan, 1 29.7

Feb, 2 33.4

Mar, 3 39.0

Apr, 4 48.2

May, 5 57.2

Jun, 6 66.9

Jul, 7 73.5

Aug, 8 71.4

Sep, 9 62.3

Oct, 10 51.4

Nov, 11 39.0

Dec, 12 31.0 21.9 1.65

Hey---Not Bad!

6

x

y

4

4C

x

y

So how does our curve fit the data?