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Function riding on another function |
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| Jan29-13, 12:14 AM | #1 |
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Function riding on another function
How do I write sin(x) where the x-axis is a function itself. For example, I want to write sin(x) along a half circle. I need to "wrap" the function, similar to "De Broglie wavelength" in image below.
More specifically, I want to write f1 = 0.1*sin(x) the where the x-axis is f2 = sqrt(10^2 - x^2). I know that this generally will not pass the vertical line test. But for my application it will becuase the sin(x) has small amplitude compared to the circle radius. |
| Jan29-13, 01:11 AM | #2 |
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Hey preposterous.
One example like the diagram in your post would be in polar co-ordinates: r = 1 + 0.5*cos(theta) where in cartesian co-ordinates you use the relationship: r^2 = x^2 + y^2 and tan(theta) = y/x |
| Jan29-13, 04:18 AM | #3 |
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Why not
0.1 * sin(sqrt(10^2 - x^2)) |
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