Waves and Phases: Understanding 90 and 180 Degrees Out of Phase

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Two sine waves can be 180 degrees out of phase if one is inverted, contradicting the teacher's claim that they are 90 degrees out of phase. To graph waves that are 90 or 270 degrees out of phase, one can utilize the symmetry of sine and cosine functions, noting that a sine wave shifted 90 degrees left resembles a cosine wave. A 360-degree phase shift is equivalent to a 0-degree phase shift, meaning the waves are in sync. Waves that are 180 degrees out of phase do indeed cancel each other out. Understanding these concepts can be clarified by examining the graphs of sine and cosine functions.
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I believe I was mitaught something in class so would like to double check.

If I had two sin waves, but one was inverted, would the waves be 180o out of phase. (my teacher said 90 degress out of phase)

If so, how would I draw a graph where the waves are 90 o / 270 o out of phase

thanks

also, is 360 degrees out of phase the same as 0 degrees out of phase?

if waves are 180 degress out of phase do they cancel each other out?
 
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I'm not going to answer those all those questions...but if you graph or look at a graph of the sine and cosine functions you can figure them out for yourself...then you'll understand.



Note that a simple sine function graph starts from the origin (zero) and increases to a maximum at 90 degrees...the cosine function starts at a maximum and decreases to zero at 90 degress...

How do you make one look like the other? Look at the graphs...use the Y symmetry axis
as your reference...
If you shift a sine wave 90 degress left it looks just like a cosine; shift a cosine wave 90 degrees right it looks just like a sine wave...

Here is one set of graphs: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosine_wave
 
To answer your questions:
Yes (your teacher is wrong)
(see Naty1's answer)
Yes
Yes
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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