Why are hyperbolic cosine and sine functions named with h in cosh and sinh?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the naming of hyperbolic cosine (cosh) and hyperbolic sine (sinh) functions, exploring their definitions and relationships to circular functions. Participants examine the mathematical properties and analogies between these functions, including their geometric interpretations related to circles and hyperbolas.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that the "cos" and "sin" in "cosh" and "sinh" relate to their definitions involving exponential functions, similar to the circular functions defined with complex exponentials.
  • Another participant explains that circular functions correspond to the equation of a unit circle, while hyperbolic functions relate to the equation of a hyperbola, drawing parallels between their parametric representations.
  • Some participants note the identities of circular and hyperbolic functions, highlighting the mathematical similarities and differences, such as \(\cos^2 z + \sin^2 z = 1\) versus \(\cosh^2 z - \sinh^2 z = 1\).
  • There is a discussion about the interpretation of the parameter \(t\) in relation to distances and areas under the curves of the respective functions, with one participant acknowledging a misinterpretation regarding area and arc length.
  • One participant introduces the concept of parabolic trigonometric functions, suggesting a further analogy with hyperbolic and circular functions.
  • A later reply mentions the duality between trigonometric and hyperbolic functions, describing them as mirror images mathematically.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express various viewpoints on the relationships and definitions of hyperbolic and circular functions, with no clear consensus reached on the origins of the "h" in hyperbolic or the implications of the analogies drawn.

Contextual Notes

Some discussions involve assumptions about the interpretations of parameters and the geometric properties of the functions, which may not be universally agreed upon or fully resolved.

quasar987
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I just got a clue as to why 0.5(e^x + e^-x) was called "hyperbolic cosine" and 0.5(e^x - e^-x) is called "hyperbolic sine". It is because the "complex version" reads

[tex]cos(x)=\frac{e^{ix}+e^{-ix}}{2}[/tex]

[tex]sin(x)=\frac{e^{ix}-e^{-ix}}{2i}[/tex]

That explains the "cos" and "sin" part in "cosh" and "sinh", but what does the "h" (hyperbolic) part comes from?
 
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sin(x) and cos(x)
are called circular functions because
x^2+y^2=1
is the the equation of a (unit) circle
and if x(t) and y(t) points on the circle under the natural parametritization where t is the distance along the curve from (1,0) to (x(t),y(t)) then
x(t)=cos(t)
y(t)=sin(t)
likewise
x^2-y^2=1
is the the equation of a (unit) hyperbola
and if x(t) and y(t) points on the hyperbola under the natural parametritization where t is the distance along the curve from (1,0) to (x(t),y(t)) then
x(t)=cosh(t)
y(t)=sinh(t)
if we take t>=0 we get one forth the hyperbola, we can get the whole thing by using different signs
x(t)={+,-}cosh(t)
y(t)={+,-}sinh(t)
the interpatation of t as distance changes slightly though the sign of cosh determines if the starting point is (1,0) of (-1,0) the sign of sinh determines which direction is considered positive (or if t is kept nonnegitive wether we travel up or down from the starting point).
 
Notice that [itex]x^2 + y^2 = constant[/itex] represents a circle while [itex]x^2-y^2 = constant[/itex] represents a hyperbola. Compare these with the identities [itex]\cos^2 z + \sin^2 z = 1[/itex] for the circular functions and [itex]\cosh^2 z - \sinh^2z=1[/itex] for the hyperbolic functions. :)
 
Haha, very nice. :smile:
 
lurflurf said:
sin(x) and cos(x)
are called circular functions because
x^2+y^2=1
is the the equation of a (unit) circle
and if x(t) and y(t) points on the circle under the natural parametritization where t is the distance along the curve from (1,0) to (x(t),y(t)) then
x(t)=cos(t)
y(t)=sin(t)
likewise
x^2-y^2=1
is the the equation of a (unit) hyperbola
and if x(t) and y(t) points on the hyperbola under the natural parametritization where t is the distance along the curve from (1,0) to (x(t),y(t)) then
x(t)=cosh(t)
y(t)=sinh(t)
if we take t>=0 we get one forth the hyperbola, we can get the whole thing by using different signs
x(t)={+,-}cosh(t)
y(t)={+,-}sinh(t)
the interpatation of t as distance changes slightly though the sign of cosh determines if the starting point is (1,0) of (-1,0) the sign of sinh determines which direction is considered positive (or if t is kept nonnegitive wether we travel up or down from the starting point).

Actually t is the area between the radius(the segment between (0,0) and (x,y)), the curve and the x axis. In the case of the unit circle the area is numerically equal to the arc, but not in the hyperbola.
 
SGT said:
Actually t is the area between the radius(the segment between (0,0) and (x,y)), the curve and the x axis. In the case of the unit circle the area is numerically equal to the arc, but not in the hyperbola.
Oops. I took the analogy too far. Area is what generalizes not arc length.
That would also hold with parabolic trig functions
cosp(t)=t
sinp(t)=t^2/2
 
lurflurf said:
Oops. I took the analogy too far. Area is what generalizes not arc length.
That would also hold with parabolic trig functions
cosp(t)=t
sinp(t)=t^2/2

Parabolic trig. functions?
 
re

Trig and hyperbolic trig functions are exacltly mirror images of one another, mathematically of course. (duality)
 

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