Tricky Trig Function Find the eqn Help

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around finding the equation of a sine function with specific characteristics, including vertical displacement, horizontal phase shift, period, reflection, and amplitude. The subject area is trigonometric functions and their transformations.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the general form of a sine function and its parameters, questioning the validity of having both a reflection in the y-axis and a phase shift. There are also considerations about the correct phase shift direction and potential adjustments to the period.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants offering different interpretations of the phase shift and period. Some guidance has been provided regarding the general form of the sine function and the implications of the phase shift, but no consensus has been reached.

Contextual Notes

Participants are navigating potential contradictions in the function's requirements, such as the implications of having a reflection and a phase shift simultaneously. There is also mention of the need for clarity on the correct values for the phase shift and period.

aisha
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Find the equation of a sine function that has a vertical displacement 2 units down, a horizontal phase shift pi/3 to the right, a period of pi/6, reflection in the y-axis and the amplitude of 3.

my answer [tex]y=3\sin [-12(x+\frac {\pi} {3})] -2[/tex]

is this what you get?
 
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A sine wave function can be expressed generally as:

[tex]f(x)=A\sin (\frac{2\pi x}{T}+ \theta}) + C[/tex]

where A is peak to peak amplitude, T is period (or 1/T = frequency f), theta is phase shift (horizontal), and C is the vertical displacement.

P.S. Your original question. Having the function be both even (reflected about the y-axis), and also forcing a phase-shift generally doesn't make sense (given you want a continuous function). Having both conditions satisfied would be purely coincidental.

Edit: I forgot to note, when your theta is positive, the phase shift wil be to the left. A negative theta will result in a shift to the right.
 
Last edited:
I think it should be pi/36 instead of pi/3 although I could be wrong.
 
Anyone else get the same answer as me?
 
At first glance it looks OK. The only thing I found is that for a phase shift to the right, it would be x-pi/3 rather than x+pi/3.
 

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