The motion of a dot (spot, point) on the outer edge of a tire on your car as it drives down a smooth, straight road.
it's a sine wave
See the link belowA sine wave is computed by a mathematical function. A pure sine wave in a physical sense would exactly match the calculated value in the function at every point in time.
Sine wave
sine wave.
Yes. An electromagnetic wave follows a sine-wave pattern.
The sine wave, with its repeating pattern, can represent a single frequency with no harmonics.
Yes: they represent the same thing.
By shifting the sine wave by 45 degrees.
A sine wave is the graph of y = sin(x). It demonstrates to cyclic nature of the sine function.
The voice is not a sine wave.
a phase shifted sine wave of a different amplitude.
cos wave
A sine wave has no harmonics. It only has a fundamental, so the value of the 2nd, 3rd, and 12th harmonics of a sine wave is zero.
It's called a sine wave because the waveform can be reproduced as a graph of the sine or cosine functions sin(x) or cos (x).
The differential of the sine function is the cosine function while the differential of the cosine function is the negative of the sine function.
it's a sine wave
A simple wave function can be expressed as a trigonometric function of either sine or cosine. lamba = A sine(a+bt) or lamba = A cosine(a+bt) where lamba = the y value of the wave A= magnitude of the wave a= phase angle b= frequency. the derivative of sine is cosine and the derivative of cosine is -sine so the derivative of a sine wave function would be y'=Ab cosine(a+bt) """"""""""""""""""" cosine wave function would be y' =-Ab sine(a+bt)