Graphing Trigonometric Functions

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 31 янв 2025

Комментарии • 119

  • @rocks7456
    @rocks7456 4 года назад +198

    You and Organic Chemistry Tutor were the only persons who let me understand this topic. Thank you so much for making online classes a lot easier. :'>

    • @rahultr7198
      @rahultr7198 3 года назад

      Me too

    • @mushtaqrasool9169
      @mushtaqrasool9169 3 года назад +4

      this is why we have such teachers that actually care about people understanding the concept instead of the student grasping it on his own. Thank you, professor, for getting into our lives

    • @suzywhall9494
      @suzywhall9494 2 года назад

      So accurate!

    • @pausasil7867
      @pausasil7867 Год назад

      😅

    • @cocoh98
      @cocoh98 4 месяца назад

      Definitely prescise😊

  • @barrydavis331
    @barrydavis331 5 лет назад +46

    Thank you for this video, sir! My vision for beginning a math video series has "everything" you did here: limited review, error-free content focused to match the title, and scripted conversation. I love the graphing technology and the exit ticket. I watched dozens of videos and got very discouraged before arriving at this one. Awesome job!

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  5 лет назад +13

      be sure to check out my whole mathematics playlist!

    • @ivoryas1696
      @ivoryas1696 3 года назад +2

      ​@@ProfessorDaveExplains
      Once I stop being not-so-good at math, I, for one, plan to.
      Under the assumption that it'll help my physics understanding, of course not exclusively 😅

  • @victoriat.2093
    @victoriat.2093 6 лет назад +79

    learned more from this 12 min video than 2 weeks in class

  • @sudarshandeo
    @sudarshandeo 2 года назад +4

    Thanks!

  • @subashkandel8116
    @subashkandel8116 4 года назад +36

    hey man you are doing great keep making such videos. i dont why you get less views. but keep doing this you are really inspiring me and my friends to learn.

  • @Figarland4
    @Figarland4 7 лет назад +199

    It makes sense he teaches Italian, math, physics, chemistry... It's Jesus! Hahah :P

  • @RedRahiq
    @RedRahiq 5 месяцев назад +7

    For who didn't get it:
    take " y=Asin(Bx-C)+D "
    A: is the amplitude
    The distace between the horizontal axis and the max/min of the function.
    B: affects the period and the phase shift
    To find the period, we take " period=2π/B ".
    C: affects the phase shift
    The phase shift is "C/B", that's why I wrote that B affects it.
    D:affects vertical shift
    If positive, it goes up by D. If negative, it goes down by |D|.
    Hope it helps.

  • @CyberSinke
    @CyberSinke 3 года назад +6

    1:32 there's an error - instead of y=cos(theta) it should be x=cos(theta). If this wasn't confusing enough, further on in the video, x is used to represent an angle theta...

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  3 года назад +7

      Functions are traditionally represented with a y. That is examining the domain and range of y = cos(theta). And the angle can be represented with any variable, we normally use x and y when representing functions, so that works just fine.

    • @wiki6494
      @wiki6494 6 месяцев назад +2

      thank you my man, was thinking the same. It just is very confusing that y is both a cardinal and a random incognita, but good prof dave replied.

  • @invaderspencer
    @invaderspencer Год назад

    this channel saves my life all the time

  • @轻之肥宅轻之肥宅
    @轻之肥宅轻之肥宅 8 месяцев назад +1

    Such a summary about Trigonometric Functions is really hlepful

  • @ashIesha
    @ashIesha Год назад +1

    you’re heaven sent whether it’s for math or chemistry. thank you so much for uploading these

  • @misabmalbari4575
    @misabmalbari4575 3 года назад

    You are underrated!!! You should get over 10 million subs!!! Best of luck

  • @jnxed8121
    @jnxed8121 3 года назад +5

    professor dave, organic chemistry, and fort bend tutoring are my three avengers in learning math

  • @shreya-artistics2711
    @shreya-artistics2711 2 года назад +1

    Thanku sir your graph each and every value which is important

  • @viennasausagelover96_29
    @viennasausagelover96_29 Год назад +1

    Ap chemistry, math placement tests, this guy has always got my back and makes things simple and quick

  • @jerrygarrison7591
    @jerrygarrison7591 4 года назад +2

    Why did you divide by two when finding the phase shift? Is it because the horizontal stretch of 2 (the coefficient of x) is causing things to compress? If so, what is the relation between the two? Also, I am referring to 7:58 in the video.

    • @mushtaqrasool9169
      @mushtaqrasool9169 3 года назад

      i am not dave but pretty sure he did that for the reason you mentioned, because I tried and my computer died

    • @heliomiranda9622
      @heliomiranda9622 Год назад

      I think the purpose is just to adjust the "proportion" of the phase shift to match with the compression caused by the two to the "x"... then the relation between the two is just to make things inversely proportional or else the graph would have a big shift instead of the half of it related to the compression... so if it was 3(x) the phase shift would be (2pi/3)/3.

  • @danielcutting2796
    @danielcutting2796 5 лет назад +2

    Getting me on track, prof dave

  • @satvikchauhan85
    @satvikchauhan85 4 года назад +2

    Please make videos on more difficult trigonometric identities

  • @vidyamusic6794
    @vidyamusic6794 6 лет назад +4

    Very helpful sir keep uploading

  • @MXGIRL87
    @MXGIRL87 11 месяцев назад +2

    5:44 how is the period of the function pi, but also 2pi/b which one is it?

    • @MXGIRL87
      @MXGIRL87 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@Belmont1714 thank you!

    • @guiltystress509
      @guiltystress509 3 месяца назад

      in that problem pi was a result of dividing 2pi by 2, and remember b=2 here, so 2pi/b = 2pi/2 which gave us "pi" for this problems period

  • @AlessandroZir
    @AlessandroZir 2 года назад

    I think we can say you might be better than Eddie Woo!!! very nice video indeed; thanks allot! ❤❤

  • @harshsinghal4342
    @harshsinghal4342 7 лет назад +4

    but we can also plug in complex arguments in trig functions and get all numbers on the complex plane. Are there any ways to visualize complex angles like in sin(2+3i)=9.15-4.169i, how can we visualize angle (2+3i)? or is it just rigorous mathematics?

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  7 лет назад +8

      oh man, i dunno! i know there is a way to plot complex numbers on the coordinate plane, but i'm not sure how to plot them as angles. something to think about!

  • @maryamshakir1183
    @maryamshakir1183 4 года назад +1

    Excellent video!

  • @bmzaron713
    @bmzaron713 3 года назад

    y = sin (2)x is a horizontal compression
    it would be a horizontal stretch if you had a fraction instead of (2).

  • @flaneurable
    @flaneurable 4 года назад +1

    It's like a rollercoaster! I'm glad he mentioned comprehension.

  • @altruisticcosmos
    @altruisticcosmos Год назад +1

    🙏
    Thankyou sir
    From India your student 😅Neva

  • @SAIROSHAN-li4bx
    @SAIROSHAN-li4bx Год назад +3

    Prof dave i learned a lot thanks for the video please keep making such videos so beginners can understand things thanks a lot prof

  • @aveinmovil
    @aveinmovil 2 года назад +4

    Hi! Not getting why we divide by two when finding the phase shift of "y=4sin(2x -2pi/3)"

    • @ArzybgVideeoo-ng9oc
      @ArzybgVideeoo-ng9oc 2 месяца назад

      inverse solutions across = axis when solve for x or y, inversely x / are ±

  • @abrehamephrem1302
    @abrehamephrem1302 4 года назад +1

    Wowwwwww kep up the good work professor dave

  • @astha_yadav
    @astha_yadav 3 года назад +1

    Awesome!!
    Thank you so much. Clear concise, and includes everything needed.
    You're Jesus (and look like him toooo)

  • @lidyaangelin8927
    @lidyaangelin8927 7 лет назад +2

    Thankyou so much

  • @Nuggetz23
    @Nuggetz23 Год назад +1

    I'm confused about something in this video. You can see in the 1:05 that the range of trigonometric function are the possible sine values but then when it goes in the 1:16 it says that the range of trigonometric function is -1≤y≤1. How did it change from being all possible sine values to -1≤y≤1? I'm literally confused here?🤔 Can someone explain?

    • @Wutheheooooo
      @Wutheheooooo 10 месяцев назад +1

      it is just all possible sin value, bigger than -1 and smaller than 1

    • @Wutheheooooo
      @Wutheheooooo 10 месяцев назад +1

      sin value can be everything in between but not bigger than 1 or smaller than -1

  • @vidyamusic6794
    @vidyamusic6794 6 лет назад +8

    Love from india

  • @RadoHudran
    @RadoHudran 3 года назад +1

    I feel like at 6:25 horizontal shift should have a - in front of it, just like we've seen in the videos before

  • @rohitzode1192
    @rohitzode1192 4 года назад +1

    His first video on this playlist solved one of my biggest confusion ....thank you sir......And I love your intro song sir🙂

  • @amlanashirbadnayak3270
    @amlanashirbadnayak3270 3 года назад +4

    so blessed to learn maths from jesus himself

  • @SAIROSHAN-li4bx
    @SAIROSHAN-li4bx Год назад +1

    Prof in 8:01 i didnt understand why u divided 2 pi/3 by 2 wouldnt that change the magnitude of the horizontal shift

    • @heliomiranda9622
      @heliomiranda9622 Год назад +2

      I think the purpose is just to adjust the "proportion" of the phase shift to match with the compression caused by the two to the "x"... then the relation between the two is just to make things inversely proportional or else the graph would have a big/disproportional shift instead of the half of it related to the compression... so just on the "graph representation" if it was 3(x) the phase shift would be (2pi/3)/3... if it was 4(x) the phase shift would be (2pi/3)/4... and so on. :)

  • @Mahi-co8ue
    @Mahi-co8ue 3 года назад

    I would like to watch your precalculus playlist after completing trigonometry playlist

  • @Andraya770
    @Andraya770 5 лет назад +1

    Could you maybe explain how to do the tasks at the end?

    • @آلاء-ب7ب
      @آلاء-ب7ب 3 года назад +2

      It's been a year you've probably figured it out, but for those having the same question in the future. Prof explained in the video that the period = 2π/b where b is the horizontal stretch. The first question is saying period is 4π then 4π=2π/b then you can figure what the horizontal stretch is

  • @rishabbalai721
    @rishabbalai721 4 года назад +2

    Sir..... While we graph the trig functions.....is the domain in radians and is it becoz we cant have domain in degrees? For example sin x graph... All x values are in radians?

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  4 года назад +3

      You can do degrees it’s just that radians is more standard

    • @carultch
      @carultch 3 года назад +2

      Mathematicians prefer radians on these functions, because it makes the Calculus a lot more simple and elegant. You can have the domain in units of degrees, it just means that there is a conversion factor inside the function, and that conversion factor accumulates through the chain rule when you use Calculus on these functions.
      For instance, the derivative of sine is cosine, when the input units are radians, which keeps it simple. But when the input units are degrees, the derivative of sin(x) is (pi/180)*cos(x).
      There is also nothing special about degrees, as we've arbitrarily defined the full circle to be 360 degrees. It has its advantage because it can be divided in to an integer by all numbers from 1 thru 10, with the exception of 7. But radians have the advantage when it comes to further mathematics, such as Calculus, which is why mathematicians prefer radians.

  • @shaazin24
    @shaazin24 Месяц назад

    my favorite intro here :)

  • @sarafeliciano3088
    @sarafeliciano3088 4 года назад +1

    Hi Dave, I do not understand the last part of the transformation... y=4sin(2x -2pi/3),
    when we do the phase shift, -2pi/3, why do we have to divide by 2? thanks

    • @АлексейТ-з3ь
      @АлексейТ-з3ь 4 года назад +1

      y=4sin(2x -2pi/3) -> 2x - 2pi/3 = 0 -> 2x=2pi/3 -> x=pi/3

    • @MedK001
      @MedK001 2 года назад +1

      You have to divide by 2 because the period was changed (x got multiplied by 2)

  • @martinzuze452
    @martinzuze452 2 года назад +1

    My best teacher ever
    your explanation is so wonderful
    loving your lecture

  • @sheenaroda3897
    @sheenaroda3897 2 года назад

    thankyou sm 😭

  • @Adam-cn5ib
    @Adam-cn5ib 5 лет назад +2

    Professor please i do not understand? This seems very strange of a subject to me. Where can I further observe this?

  • @karmansingh6926
    @karmansingh6926 4 года назад +2

    hey I don't know if you are still replying to comments but I have been trying to get ahead of my class in school and do trigonometry in my free time however I cant seem to understand how you got to tan=sin/cos could you please help me thank you

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  4 года назад +2

      just start at the beginning of the trigonometry playlist!

    • @karmansingh6926
      @karmansingh6926 4 года назад +1

      Professor Dave Explains thank you very much I had just figured it out and I just want to say I love your stuff and please keep these educational videos coming :)

  • @multimeme5935
    @multimeme5935 Год назад

    thanks a lot.

  • @madeshgundloor6588
    @madeshgundloor6588 5 лет назад +1

    Excellent job for giving valuable information...

  • @jakeroosenbloom
    @jakeroosenbloom 7 лет назад +2

    Weird. I don't have a 480p or 720p resolution options available? Idk what's happening

    • @Jam-zt4xe
      @Jam-zt4xe 4 года назад +1

      You came from future

  • @eggxecution
    @eggxecution Год назад

    I see it now lol thank you for your vivid explanation!

  • @OquendoMath
    @OquendoMath 4 года назад

    The perfect video I was looking for to help my kids with Intro to graphing Trig functions, THANKS

  • @gianfrancobruschetta2423
    @gianfrancobruschetta2423 2 года назад +1

    Hi, didn't get why we have to divide phase shift by 2 😅
    Thanks.

  • @oliviamou60
    @oliviamou60 2 года назад +1

    why did u do 2pi-3/2 i don't get that part at all

  • @Nemoguzapomnit
    @Nemoguzapomnit 6 лет назад +4

    Thx for your videos professor Dave!
    I can't get how x/2 and 2x appeared in the task :(
    Are you just dividing 2π/4π to gen 1x/2 is case with sin
    and 2π/π to get 2x in case with cos?

  • @sislol3685
    @sislol3685 4 года назад

    Are pi or 2pi the same in the comprehension case?

  • @tGoldenPhoenix
    @tGoldenPhoenix 3 года назад

    Done.

  • @jojobenzo6785
    @jojobenzo6785 4 года назад

    dope vid davey boy

  • @RaffaelloLorenzusSayde
    @RaffaelloLorenzusSayde 4 года назад +1

    What about in degrees?

    • @carultch
      @carultch 3 года назад +1

      Mathematicians prefer radians on these functions, because it makes the Calculus a lot more simple and elegant. You can have the domain in units of degrees, it just means that there is a conversion factor inside the function, and that conversion factor accumulates through the chain rule when you use Calculus on these functions.
      For instance, the derivative of sine is cosine, when the input units are radians, which keeps it simple. But when the input units are degrees, the derivative of sin(x) is (pi/180)*cos(x).
      There is also nothing special about degrees, as we've arbitrarily defined the full circle to be 360 degrees. It has its advantage because it can be divided in to an integer by all numbers from 1 thru 10, with the exception of 7. But radians have the advantage when it comes to further mathematics, such as Calculus, which is why mathematicians prefer radians.

  • @additimehta3189
    @additimehta3189 4 года назад

    Why do you have divide the phase shift by 2?

  • @lovedbystraykids
    @lovedbystraykids Месяц назад

    Love you

  • @HectorPerez-xu9ks
    @HectorPerez-xu9ks 4 года назад

    7:36 why over (as opposed to times) that term?

    • @carultch
      @carultch 3 года назад

      The term multiplied by the input is called the angular frequency (traditionally noted as omega). It has units of radians per second, or degrees per second, depending on the choice of unit for your trig function.
      Period (traditionally noted T) has the unit of seconds per cycle. To get from angular frequency in radians per second to period in seconds, you use dimensional analysis, to cancel the radians, convert to cycles, and to get seconds in the numerator.
      (omega radians/second) / (2*pi radians / cycle) = frequency f in units of cycles per second or Hertz.
      Take the 1/frequency to get the period in seconds per cycle.

  • @herrkommandank675
    @herrkommandank675 3 года назад

    Blessed be your name, Trigonometry Jesus, may you forgive our computational errors, and gives us our daily formulas, for now as it is in our Pre-Calculus Class, Amen

  • @johnallenbautista8408
    @johnallenbautista8408 3 года назад

    thank you math jesus

  • @ruhamaalebachew-o7k
    @ruhamaalebachew-o7k 11 месяцев назад

    But cos is x
    Isn't

  • @eipimath
    @eipimath 2 года назад

    Thanks for sharing! I posted a video on explaining the sine graph. Let me know your thoughts.

  • @bluebrowney251
    @bluebrowney251 3 года назад +2

    I have a question, um why does a trigonometric phase shift have to be divided by b and other functions don’t? ..... or do they?

    • @carultch
      @carultch 3 года назад +3

      Given the parent form of a trig function:
      y = sin(x)
      Now add an amplitude A, and angular frequency (B) to it:
      y = A*sin(B*x)
      Now suppose we want to shift it to the right, by a time shift of C. Locate x, and enclose it in parenthesis. Subtract C from x inside those parenthesis. We subtract from x to shift right, we add to x to shift it left.
      y = A*sin(B*(X - C))
      If you distribute B among the terms in the parentheses, you get:
      y = A*sin(B*x - B*C)
      The term B*C becomes the phase shift, that is traditionally noted as phi. It has units of radians, assuming the sine is configured for radians as the input unit.
      We could also shift this vertically, a distance D, that is called the offset.
      y = A*sin(B*x - B*C) + D
      This is the general equation for a sine wave, that is shifted C units to the right, and D units vertically. It has an amplitude of A, and an angular frequency of B. Its period would be 2*pi/B, assuming the x units are radians.

    • @rodger3352
      @rodger3352 Год назад

      omg, thank you so much for the effort ! :)) @@carultch

  • @DoubleQCubed-d7o
    @DoubleQCubed-d7o Месяц назад

    uef

  • @slickyy21
    @slickyy21 Год назад +3

    PEAK OF ADHD!

  • @ethan_nas
    @ethan_nas 4 месяца назад +1

    im cooked on text

  • @sushilthakre5492
    @sushilthakre5492 7 лет назад +3

    Not understanding anything ? It's maths . I have failed in maths in my 12 th stdio. lol .

    • @ProfessorDaveExplains
      @ProfessorDaveExplains  7 лет назад +2

      if this is confusing start from the beginning of the trigonometry portion of the series!

    • @sushilthakre5492
      @sushilthakre5492 7 лет назад +1

      Professor Dave Explains OK Sir I will do that. I want to improve my maths.

  • @NasrinMitu-nl5vu
    @NasrinMitu-nl5vu 8 месяцев назад +1

    WHAT THE HECK IS COS AND SIN

    • @RedRahiq
      @RedRahiq 5 месяцев назад

      Check earlier Trigonometric videos first.

  • @DoubleQCubed-d7o
    @DoubleQCubed-d7o Месяц назад

    !y

  • @gradeoff3062
    @gradeoff3062 5 лет назад

    This makes no sense

    • @ivoryas1696
      @ivoryas1696 3 года назад

      Gradeoff
      What part about it?