I've never seen the word "into" in this context. If it means x to the power of sin(x) then it's xsin(x) and for any x you'll have to look up sin (x) and that is the power you have to raise x by.
We're not sure how you wrote the question.If you wrote it as a subtraction: [ cosecant minus 1 ] = sine, then no, that's false.If you wrote it as an exponent: [ cosecant to the -1 power ] = sine, then yes, that's true.1 / csc(x) = sin(x)
-cosine x
2 x 10 to power 6 cycles in 1 sec. Period is (1) / (2 x 10 to power 6) = (0.5) x (10 to the power -6) = 0.5 microseconds
A sine wave is the graph of y = sin(x). It demonstrates to cyclic nature of the sine function.
There are numerous ways of doing this; it depends on what information you are give to start with. One method is: power = apparent power x cosine (phase angle)reactive power = apparent power x sine (phase angle)(where apparent power = supply voltage x load current)
It's called a sine wave because the waveform can be reproduced as a graph of the sine or cosine functions sin(x) or cos (x).
The sine of 180 degrees is 0. Remember, the sine value on a unit circle is the y-value. If you find f(pi) in the function f(x)=sin(x), you will get zero as an answer.
sinh(x) = ½[ex-e-x]
-- sin(x) is a number. It's the sine of the angle 'x'. -- sin-1(x) is an angle. It's the angle whose sine is the number 'x'.
It is simply the sine of the supplementary angle. If x is an angle measuring (90, 180) degrees, then sin(x) = sin(180 - x).
To find which angle has a sine of 0.13, you calculate arcsin or sin^-1(0.13) =7.47 degrees 7.47 degrees has a sine of 0.13. There is also another angle , below 360 , has a sine of 0.13. Subtract 7.47 from 180. 180-7.47 = 172.53 degrees also has a sine of 0.13.
It could. This is what would happen if it did.