Property
The sine and cosine functions have several distinct characteristics:
- They are periodic functions with a period of 2π.
- The domain of each function is (−∞,∞) and the range is [−1,1].
- The graph of y=sin(x) is symmetric about the origin, because it is an odd function.
- The graph of y=cos(x) is symmetric about the y-axis, because it is an even function.
A periodic function is a function for which a specific horizontal shift, P, results in a function equal to the original function: f(x+P)=f(x) for all values of x in the domain of f. When this occurs, we call the smallest such horizontal shift with P>0 the period of the function.
Examples
- The function f(x)=cos(x) repeats its values every 2π units, so its period is 2π. Since its graph is a mirror image across the y-axis, it is an even function.
- The function f(x)=sin(x) has a domain of all real numbers and a range of [−1,1]. This means it can take any x-input, but its output will always be between -1 and 1, inclusive.
- The graph of y=sin(x) is an odd function, which means that sin(−x)=−sin(x). For instance, sin(−2π)=−1, which is the same as −sin(2π).
Explanation
These are the foundational rules for sine and cosine waves. Their repeating nature (period), their height limits (range), and their specific symmetries (odd/even) make their behavior predictable and useful for modeling cycles.