Wave Equation: A = A cos (kx - ωt), Meaning & Significance

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The wave equation A = A cos(kx - ωt) and its alternative form A = A sin(ωt - kx) differ by a sign in the argument, which reflects the direction of wave propagation. The minus sign in the first equation indicates a wave moving in the positive x direction, while a plus sign signifies movement in the opposite direction. Both forms can be used interchangeably due to the even nature of the cosine function, where cos(-z) = cos(z). The general solution to the wave equation combines both sine and cosine terms, with coefficients determined by initial or boundary conditions. Understanding these relationships clarifies how wave equations can represent various wave behaviors.
quietrain
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a wave equation is given as A = A cos (kx - ωt)

so why if someone describes the wave equation to be A = A sin (ωt - kx) , the argument of the sin function changes by a minus sign?

and is there a meaning to it?

also i still don't really understand why the minus sign in the first equation signifies wave moving forward whereas a + sign signifies wave moving backwards ...

thanks a lot for the help!
 
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kx - ωt = kx' - ωt' if both x' > x and t' > t. => The same wave value A cos(kx - ωt) propagates with time in positive x direction.
 
You don't have a wave equation there, you have solutions to a wave equation.

As well, since cos(-z) = cos(z), i.e. cos is an even function you can write the cos solution as A cos (ωt - kx) if you wish.

The general solution to the wave equation is
Acos(wt - kx) + Bsin(wt -kx)
where A and B are determined by the initial or boundary conditions
If you wrote the general solution in terms of (kx - wt) then the sign of the factor multiplying the sin function would change to accoomdate this.
 
oh...

so cos (kx - ωt) = cos (ωt- kx ) because it is an even function.

so what's the difference if we choose to write it in sin instead?
 
quietrain said:
...so what's the difference if we choose to write it in sin instead?
You can write in either way. The initial/boundary conditions will determine the signs and values of coefficients A and B in the general solution Acos(wt - kx) + Bsin(wt -kx).
 
oh i see thanks
 
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