A sine graph!
The graph of the sine function is periodic at every point. Periodic means that the value of the function at every point is repeated after an integer multiple of the period.
A sine wave is the graph of y = sin(x). It demonstrates to cyclic nature of the sine function.
Yes, I did.
Yes, it is called arcsin.
the graph is called a line
sine graph will be formed at origine of graph and cosine graph is find on y-axise
The graph of the sine function is periodic at every point. Periodic means that the value of the function at every point is repeated after an integer multiple of the period.
A sine wave is the graph of y = sin(x). It demonstrates to cyclic nature of the sine function.
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 title of a trigonometric graph typically reflects the specific function it represents, such as "Sine Wave," "Cosine Wave," or "Tangent Function." If the graph depicts a sine function, for instance, it may be titled "y = sin(x)." The title helps to identify the type of periodic function and its characteristics, such as amplitude and frequency.
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.
Yes, I did.
Yes, it is called arcsin.
the graph is called a line
A cubic graph!
If you mean the sine function, it is dependent on an angle. For example, the sine of an angle of zero degrees is zero; the sine of an angle of 90 degrees is one; for an angle of 180 degrees, the sine is again 0; if you make a graph, you get a curve that looks like a wave. In general, the values the sine function can take are between 1 and -1, inclusive.
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).