Nick Jackson said:
I saw that somewhere and it is supposed to be something Fourier came up with but I can't find somewhere why...
Please explain (with mathematical description if possible)
Mathematically, you can rewrite almost
any function as a Fourier series, i.e. a sum of sine and cosine functions of different amplitudes and frequencies. Here's the mathematical expression:
.
Since all waves can be modeled mathematically as a function, you can write them as a Fourier series, i.e. a combination of sine/cosine functions. Now, since a sine/cosine function can be interpreted to represent a sine/cosine wave, the answer to your question is
YES. You can indeed look at waves as a "sum of sine/cosine waves", or as a "sum of sine waves" since the sines are just phase shifted cosines, i.e. cos(x) = sin(x + pi/2).
But it's not just the mathematics that say you can do this: In nature periodic waves will be added to each other in the same fashion as in the math, so you could say that e.g. human speech is just a combination of (very many) different periodic sine waves.
If you know some serious mathematics, read on:
But the interesting point is that the Fourier series are just one of many different "expansions" you can use to represent a function. The taylor series, which has polynomials as its basis (basis = set of linearly independent functions that span all of "Hilbert space" if you know linear algebra), is another way to do it. So while you might think it doesn't matter which expansion you choose, fact of the matter it does.
In the case of waves it's MUCH easier to use Fourier series than taylor series. The reason is that the main characteristic of the Fourier series is that their basis are
periodic sine/cosine functions, and so a Fourier series is the simplest way to model a
periodic functions. Now, since the vast majority of waves are represented by periodic functions, it's very easy, and indeed natural, to represent these functions mathematically as a sum of sine waves :).