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Transverse waves, sin and cos |
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| Feb18-13, 11:28 AM | #1 |
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Transverse waves, sin and cos
Why do some wave equations use sinθ and others cosθ?
Does it make a difference when calculating properties such as wavelength and wave number? For example: y(x,t) = Asin(ωt+kx) y(x,t) = Acos(ωt+kx) |
| Feb18-13, 11:58 AM | #2 |
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I am sure your textbook might be answering questions better than me. Edit: CompuChip beat me to it!! Saxby, I did not see your question clearly. Of course, whether you use sin or cos in harmonic function is your own choice. Cos is just shifted by phase difference of pi/2. Also it does not matter because you can set your own origin anywhere in space.... |
| Feb18-13, 11:59 AM | #3 |
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They are the same, the cosine is just a sine offset by [itex]\pi / 2[/itex]:
[tex]\cos(x) = \sin(x + \pi / 2)[/tex] The most general form would be [tex]y(x, t) = A \sin(\omega t + k x + \phi)[/tex] where [itex]\phi[/itex] is some initial phase that determines y(0, 0). Usually, however, problems are (or can be) setup such that y(0, 0) = 0 or y(0, 0) = A. |
| Feb18-13, 12:10 PM | #4 |
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Transverse waves, sin and cos
Thanks for your help guys :)
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