The time it takes for a sine wave to complete one cycle is called the period. It is typically denoted by the symbol T and is the inverse of the frequency of the wave.
The number of waves in a series typically refers to the number of repeating cycles or patterns within the data. For example, in a sine wave, there is one complete cycle from peak to trough and back to peak. The number of waves in a series will depend on the frequency and period of the data.
-- On your paper, draw an 'x' axis and a 'y' axis. -- Draw a single cycle of the 'sine' function. -- At the beginning of the cycle, label the point on the x-axis "zero". -- At the end of the cycle, label the point on the x-axis "1 nanosecond".
A periodic wave repeats itself at regular intervals, with each cycle of the wave pattern identical to the previous cycle. Examples of periodic waves include sine waves and cosine waves.
The length of a Hz sine wave can be calculated using the formula: length = 1/frequency. For example, for a sine wave of 1 Hz, the length would be 1 second. This formula is derived from the relationship between frequency (number of cycles per second) and the period (duration of one cycle), where period = 1/frequency.
If you are referring to a sine wave, a crest is the point on a wave with the maximum value or upward displacement within a cycle. A trough is the opposite of a crest, so it is the minimum or lowest point in a cycle. See Photo: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Crest_trough.svg
the length of time it takes to complete one cycle
A sine graph!
1kHz
A cycle is one complete revolution of the sine wave. Hertz is the frequency of the alternating current, how many complete cycles per second. 60 Hertz would have 60 cycles each second.
Square
Yes, it is called arcsin.
One cycle of the sine wave is equal to 360 degrees. In US the frequency of power is typically 60 Hz and hence one cycle is 1/60 of a second. Therefore you can calculate the degrees at any instant of time. If at zero degrees the voltage amplitude is zero, then at 90 degrees,which is 1/4 cycle, wave is at peak voltage. At 180 degrees it is at 1/2 cycle and zero voltage and then at 270 degrees it is 3/4 of the cycle and a peak negative voltage. Finally at 360 degrees the cycle is complete and the voltage is again zero.
reciprocal of the square root of 2, converts from peak voltage to rms voltageAnother AnswerThis figure results when you work out how much work is done by one complete cycle of a.c. current. Since work is proportional to the square of a current, if you divide one complete cycle of a sine wave current into lots and lots of instantaneous values, square each of these values, find their average (mean) value, then find the square root of that value, you will have found the 'root-mean-square' of the current over a complete cycle. This value always works out to 0.707 x the peak or maximum value of the sine wave. For other waveforms, other r.m.s. values result.
Period is how long it takes for the sine and cosine functions to restart repeating themselves. Both have a period of 2pi (360 degrees).
1/6th of a cycle is 60 degrees or (pi/3) radians.
An acrophase is a time period in a cycle during which the cycle crests or peaks, especially the upper part of a sine wave fitted to a measurement of a circadian pattern.
The sine wave is also called a sinusoid is a mathematical curve that describes the smooth repetitive oscillation.