Basic Graphs Trigonometry MATH 103 S. Rook. Overview Section 4.1 in the textbook: – The sine graph – The cosine graph – The tangent graph – The cosecant.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
GRAPHS OF OTHER TRIG FUNCTIONS
Advertisements

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. Trigonometric Functions: Unit Circle Approach.
Graphs of Other Trigonometric Functions
The Other Trigonometric Functions Trigonometry MATH 103 S. Rook.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. Chapter 11 Introduction to Trigonometry.
Chapter 4: Graphing & Inverse Functions
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
TRIGONOMETRY, 5.0 STUDENTS KNOW THE DEFINITIONS OF THE TANGENT AND COTANGENT FUNCTIONS AND CAN GRAPH THEM. Graphing Other Trigonometric Functions.
The Inverse Trigonometric Functions Section 4.2. Objectives Find the exact value of expressions involving the inverse sine, cosine, and tangent functions.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 4 Graphs of the Circular Functions.
Graphs of Trigonometric Functions Digital Lesson.
Finding an Equation from Its Graph
Review of Trigonometry
Trigonometry MATH 103 S. Rook
Section 4.6 Graphs of Other Trigonometric Functions.
Graphs of Other Trigonometric Functions. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.
Lesson 4-6 Graphs of Secant and Cosecant. 2 Get out your graphing calculator… Graph the following y = cos x y = sec x What do you see??
Inverse Trigonometric Functions
7.5 The Other Trigonometric Functions. 7.5 T HE O THER T RIG F UNCTIONS Objectives:  Evaluate csc, sec and cot Vocabulary: Cosecant, Secant, Cotangent.
Trigonometric Functions Of Real Numbers
Trigonometric Functions of Any Angle MATH Precalculus S. Rook.
Graphing Trigonometric Functions. The sine function 45° 90° 135° 180° 270° 225° 0° 315° 90° 180° 270° 0 360° I II III IV sin θ θ Imagine a particle on.
Amplitude, Reflection, and Period Trigonometry MATH 103 S. Rook.
4.6 Graphs of Other Trigonometric Functions Objectives –Understand the graph of y = tan x –Graph variations of y = tan x –Understand the graph of y = cot.
Graphs of Tangent, Cotangent,
Π/4  The tangent function has some properties that are different than the sinusoidal trig. functions, resulting in a graph that differs significantly.
Definition II: Right Triangle Trigonometry Trigonometry MATH 103 S. Rook.
Cofunction Identities
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 4 Trigonometric Functions.
Slide Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley.
13.7 (part 2) answers 34) y = cos (x – 1.5) 35) y = cos (x + 3/(2π)) 36) y = sin x –3π 37) 38) y = sin (x – 2) –4 39) y = cos (x +3) + π 40) y = sin (x.
Graphs of Other Trigonometric Functions
Graphs of the Trig Functions Objective To use the graphs of the trigonometric functions.
Section 5.3 Evaluating Trigonometric Functions
Trigonometric Functions: The Unit Circle MATH Precalculus S. Rook.
Graph Trigonometric Functions
Section 6.5 Circular Functions: Graphs and Properties Copyright ©2013, 2009, 2006, 2001 Pearson Education, Inc.
4.5 Graphs of Trigonometric Functions 2014 Digital Lesson.
More Trigonometric Graphs
Aims: To know the relationship between the graphs and notation of cosine, sine and tan, with secant, cosecant and cotangent. To be able to state the domain.
2/28/2016 Perkins AP Calculus AB Day 1 Trig (Appendix Section 3)
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 4.2 Trigonometric Functions: The Unit Circle.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. CHAPTER Graphing and Inverse Functions Graphing and Inverse Functions 4.
Bellringer 3-28 What is the area of a circular sector with radius = 9 cm and a central angle of θ = 45°?
1 © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 4 Trigonometric Functions.
1 Objectives ► Graphs of Tangent, Cotangent, Secant, and Cosecant ► Graphs of Transformation of Tangent and Cotangent ► Graphs of Transformations of Cosecant.
Section 4.2 The Unit Circle. Has a radius of 1 Center at the origin Defined by the equations: a) b)
Graphing Trigonometric Functions
Trigonometric Functions of Real Numbers 5. More Trigonometric Graphs 5.4.
Graphs of Other Trigonometric Functions
The Other Trigonometric Functions
Introduction to the Six Trigonometric Functions & the Unit Circle
Trigonometric Functions: The Unit Circle Section 4.2
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Trigonometric Functions: The Unit Circle 4.2
Lesson 4.2 Trigonometric Functions: The Unit Circle
Graphs of Trigonometric Functions
Graphs of Other Trigonometric Functions 11-2
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Warm-Up: Give the exact values of the following
Graphs of Other Trigonometric Functions 11-2
Chapter 8: The Unit Circle and the Functions of Trigonometry
Graphs of Other Trigonometric Functions 11-2
Graphs of Other Trigonometric Functions 14-2
Chapter 8: The Unit Circle and the Functions of Trigonometry
Math /4.4 – Graphs of the Secant, Cosecant, Tangent, and Cotangent Functions.
Graphs of Trigonometric Functions
Presentation transcript:

Basic Graphs Trigonometry MATH 103 S. Rook

Overview Section 4.1 in the textbook: – The sine graph – The cosine graph – The tangent graph – The cosecant graph – The secant graph – The cotangent graph – Even and odd functions 2

The Sine Graph

Recall how to graph a line by using a table of values: – e.g. y = 2x – Pick values for x and then calculate y for y = sin x e.g. – All points on the sine graph can be written as (x, sin x) Obtained from the known values on the Unit Circle 4

The Sine Graph (Continued) Finally, plot the points At this point, you should mainly be concerned with recognizing the shape of the graphs of the six trigonometric functions 5

The Sine Graph and the Unit Circle Recall that on the Unit Circle, (x, y) corresponds to (cos θ, sin θ) For the sine graph, we are only concerned with the value of y: – QI: y increases to 1 – QII: y decreases to 0 – QIII: y decreases to -1 – QIV: y increases to 0 6

Period Given a function f(x), the period is the smallest value p such that f(x + p) = f(x), for all x in f – i.e. when the graph starts to repeat – the length of ONE cycle – All six trigonometric functions are periodic (repeat in an infinite number of cycles) One cycle of y = sin x consists of tracing out the Unit Circle as θ varies from 0 to 2π – The graph of y = sin x does not repeat in this interval When θ ≥ 2π, the graph of y = sin x starts to repeat Therefore, the period of y = sin x is 2π p = 2π 7

Period and Extending Graphs To extend the graph of a trigonometric function: – Utilize its period – By adding 2π to each x in the previous table of values, we obtain the next cycle of the sine graph – By adding 2πk (where k is an integer) to each x in the previous table of values, we obtain the same y-value in another cycle of the sine graph k can be negative meaning the cycles extend infinitely in both directions 8

The Sine Graph (Example) Ex 1: Extend the table of values for y = sin x to include the next cycle (i.e. 0 ≤ x ≤ 4π) 9

The Cosecant Graph

Recall the relationship between y = sin x and y = csc x: Thus, we take the reciprocal of the values from the sine graph to obtain the cosecant graph Note that some of the reciprocals will have a 0 in the denominator: – Will be undefined (e.g. π) – The graph will have a vertical asymptote at these points 11

The Cosecant Graph (Continued) Plot the points Again, be able to recognize the shape Because y = sin x and y = csc x are reciprocals, y = csc x also has a period of 2π We can use the same method to extend the cosecant graph as we did to extend the sine graph 12

The Cosine Graph

All points on the cosine graph can be written as (x, cos x) – Obtained from the known values on the Unit Circle When drawing the cosine graph, we trace out the entire Unit Circle as θ varies from 0 to 2π without the graph repeating – Therefore, the period of the cosine graph is 2π By adding 2πk to each x, we get the same y-value in another cycle of the cosine graph 14

The Cosine Graph (Continued) Plot the points Again, be able to recognize the shape of the graph We can extend the cosine graph just like how like how we extended the sine graph 15

The Cosine Graph and the Unit Circle Recall that on the Unit Circle, (x, y) corresponds to (cos θ, sin θ) For the cosine graph, we are only concerned with the value of x: – QI: x decreases to 0 – QII: x decreases to -1 – QIII: x increases to 0 – QIV: x increases to 1 16

The Cosine Graph (Example) Ex 2: Extend the table of values for y = cos x to include the previous cycle (i.e. -2π ≤ x ≤ 2π) 17

The Secant Graph

Recall the relationship between y = cos x and y = sec x: Thus, we take the reciprocal of the values from the cosine graph to obtain the secant graph Note that some of the reciprocals will have a 0 in the denominator: – Will be undefined (e.g. π ⁄ 2 ) – The graph will have a vertical asymptote at these points 19

The Secant Graph (Continued) Plot the points Again, be able to recognize the shape Because y = cos x and y = sec x are reciprocals, y = sec x also has a period of 2π We can use the same method to extend the secant graph as we did to extend the other graphs 20

The Tangent Graph

Recall the relationship of tan x between sin x and cos x: Remember that on the Unit Circle, (x, y) corresponds to (cos θ, sin θ): – Thus we can create a table of values Again, the graph will have a vertical asymptote where the tangent is undefined 22

The Tangent Graph (Continued) Plot the points Notice that the period of the tangent graph is π, NOT 2π – The graph in QI & QII will be the SAME as the graph in QIII & QIV (in reference to the unit circle) To extend the tangent graph, add kπ to each value in the previous table – Yields the same y-values in another cycle 23

The Tangent Graph (Example) Ex 3: Extend the tangent graph from -π ≤ x ≤ 2π 24

The Cotangent Graph

Recall the relationship between y = tan x and y = cot x: Thus, we take the reciprocal of the values from the tangent graph to obtain the cotangent graph Like the tangent graph, the cotangent graph has a period of π 26

The Cotangent Graph (Continued) Plot the points As with all the other graphs, be able to recognize the shape Can extend the graph like the others 27

Even and Odd Functions

Recall the definition of even and odd functions: – If f(-x) = f(x), f(x) is an even function – If f(-x) = -f(x), f(x) is an odd function Examine the Unit Circle at the right: cos(-θ) = cos θ meaning? sin(-θ) = -sin θ meaning? – Using identities, we can infer whether the remaining trigonometric functions are even or odd 29

Even and Odd Functions (Example) Ex 4: Show or evaluate the following: a) b)Show that cot(-θ) is an odd function c)cos(-θ) tan θ = sin θ 30

Summary After studying these slides, you should be able to: – Recognize the shape of the graphs of the six trigonometric functions – State the period for each trigonometric function – Work with even and odd functions Additional Practice – See the list of suggested problems for 4.1 Next lesson – Amplitude, Reflection, and Period (Section 4.2) 31