The amplitude is 4 .
5
Assuming the question refers to [sin(x)]/2 rather than sin(x/2) the answer is 1.
The amplitude of a function is half the distance between the maximum and minimum values. This is the absolute value of the number in front of the trig function. for example, y=Asin(x) or y= Acos(x) the absolute value of A is the amplitude. Therefore, the amplitude of y=-2sinx is 2
'Y' varies between -4 and +4. Viewed as a wave, its amplitude is 4.
The amplitude of the wave [ y = -2 sin(x) ] is 2.
The amplitude is 4 .
y = sin(-x)Amplitude = 1Period = 2 pi
5
Assuming the question refers to [sin(x)]/2 rather than sin(x/2) the answer is 1.
The amplitude of a function is half the distance between the maximum and minimum values. This is the absolute value of the number in front of the trig function. for example, y=Asin(x) or y= Acos(x) the absolute value of A is the amplitude. Therefore, the amplitude of y=-2sinx is 2
The amplitude is |-2| = 2.
If x = sin θ and y = cos θ then: sin² θ + cos² θ = 1 → x² + y² = 1 → x² = 1 - y²
'Y' varies between -4 and +4. Viewed as a wave, its amplitude is 4.
The amplitude is ' 1 ' .
The amplitude of the function [ sin(x) ] is 1 peak and 2 peak-to-peak . The amplitude of 6 times that function is 6 peak and 12 peak-to-peak.
Y=sin X is a function because for each value of X, there is exactly one Y value.