Tricky Trig Function Find the eqn Help

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The discussion focuses on finding the equation of a sine function with specific characteristics: a vertical displacement of 2 units down, a horizontal phase shift of π/3 to the right, a period of π/6, reflection in the y-axis, and an amplitude of 3. The proposed equation is y = 3sin[-12(x + π/3)] - 2, but there are concerns regarding the phase shift and reflection properties. It is noted that having both an even function and a phase shift is contradictory, as it typically results in a discontinuous function. Additionally, clarification is provided that a positive phase shift indicates a leftward shift, while a negative one indicates a rightward shift, suggesting a potential error in the phase shift value. The conversation concludes with a call for consensus on the correct formulation of the sine function.
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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 y=3\sin [-12(x+\frac {\pi} {3})] -2

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

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

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.
 
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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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