There are 2 ways.Ohh okay thanks guys!! I will try and perfect my trig graphs. Some textbooks don't give you the full rules so I'll have to research it. Also, can you guys help me with how to find the amplitude of y=cosx + sinx ? Approximate answer is 1.4 but I don't get how to actually find it.
Ok, for the auxiliary angle thing you need sinx+cosx to equal something right? How do you do it without it?There are 2 ways.
- Auxiliary Angle method, turning that function into root(2) * sin(x+pi/4) (3U topic)
- Using differentiation to find the stationary points and showing that the max/min is y=root(2).
Yep that's the one, you let it equal Rsin(x+a)Ok, for the auxiliary angle thing you need sinx+cosx to equal something right? How do you do it without it?
It still works, you just have to equate it with Rsin(2x+a).Sorry sorry, can someone help me with this one? y=3sin2x - 4cos2x ? How to get the amplitude for this one? The auxiliary angle thing wont work cause it's a double angle am I correct>??
Wow thank you soo much!! This is very helpfulYep that's the one, you let it equal Rsin(x+a)
Without using that, you have to use trig calculus. Let y=sin(x)+cos(x), differentiate and let it equal zero etc etc.
However, there's a chance that since the answer provided was an approximation, you were expected to sketch y=sin(x), y=cos(x) and then add the two functions.
It still works, you just have to equate it with Rsin(2x+a).
Due to the nature of the coefficients (3 and 4 will result in an R value of 5), this leads me to believe that the question intended for you to use the R method.
Generally they pick the coefficients such that you get a nice value of R.
Differentiate? with this they ask you to find this to see the gradient at the point so you can determine whether a sharp point or vertical tangent? And amplitude is the coefficient already before the trig functionJust note that in a 2U paper, they're probably expecting you to differentiate the function to find the amplitude (coz the amplitude is the max value). Its also good to keep in mind if you have ugly or mismatched angles that you can't use the auxiliary angle method on.