Well sin, cos and tan can all be grouped into the section called sinusoidal functions, dunno if that's what you were looking for.
By shifting the sine wave by 45 degrees.
The Fourier transform of a sine wave is a pair of delta functions located at the positive and negative frequencies of the sine wave.
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.
Sine wave is considered as the AC signal because it starts at 0 amplitude and it captures the alternating nature of the signal. Cosine wave is just a phase shift of the sine wave and represents the same signal. So, either sine or cosine wave can be used to represent AC signals. However, sine wave is more conventionally used.
It is a sine wave form coupled with either a DC component or other sine waves or both.The official definition of the word waveform is "a curve showing the shape of a wave at a given time."
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 sine wave, with its repeating pattern, can represent a single frequency with no harmonics.
The differential of the sine function is the cosine function while the differential of the cosine function is the negative of the sine function.