yes cos(x) makes a wave that starts on 0,1 you will have to graph it
sine graph will be formed at origine of graph and cosine graph is find on y-axise
Creating a line graph is a simple thing to do. If you have two points, you can create a line graph.
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Both sine and cosine graphs are periodic functions with a periodicity of (2\pi), meaning they repeat their values every (2\pi) radians. They both have an amplitude of 1, oscillating between -1 and 1. Additionally, the sine graph is a horizontal shift of the cosine graph; specifically, the cosine graph can be expressed as the sine graph shifted to the left by (\frac{\pi}{2}) radians. Both graphs exhibit similar shapes, featuring smooth, continuous waves.
Yes
A straight line with a positive slope on a position-time graph is the graph of an object that's moving in a straight line with constant speed.
For a general cosine graph, they would be the maximum and minimum values, and the values of the independent variable at which these are attained.Note that the graph of y = cos(x)+2 is never equal to zero, so there may not be any roots.
Increase the amplitude and the frequency
Create a graph or you can use Microsoft Office Excel those both work well. But create a graph doesn't let you do double line graphs
The negative sine graph and the positive sine graph have opposite signs: when one is negative, the other is positive - by exactly the same amount. The sine function is said to be an odd function. The two graphs for cosine are the same. The cosine function is said to be even.
the graph of cos(x)=1 when x=0the graph of sin(x)=0 when x=0.But that only tells part of the story. The two graphs are out of sync by pi/2 radians (or 90°; also referred to as 1/4 wavelength or 1/4 cycle). One cycle is 2*pi radians (the distance for the graph to get back where it started and repeat itself.The cosine graph is 'ahead' (leads) of the sine graph by 1/4 cycle. Or you can say that the sine graph lags the cosine graph by 1/4 cycle.
when two or more points can create a straight line