How do you use cosine rule to sketch y = sin 3x without technology?

Haese Mathematical Methods 11

1 Answer
May 18, 2018

It's 4.5 periods of a sine wave with the axes labeled appropriately.

Explanation:

I edited the question to match the link.

I'm not sure which cosine rule you mean, but to sketch

#y=sin 3x #

you just sketch

#y = sin x #

Don't draw anything yet. We need to figure out how much to draw.

We're to sketch from #x=0# to #3pi# which means the argument to the sine wave goes from #0# to #9 pi# because it's multiplied by three. That means we need four and half periods of the sine wave, because the period of #sin x# is #2pi#.

Now we can draw the axes and #4 1/2# periods of a sine wave the usual way, starting from the origin and off to the right.

The zero crossings of #sin 3x# will be at #0, pi/3, {2pi}/3, pi, ... #. Label the x axis at those points.

We're not scaling or adding to the sin, so the y axis will have the usual +1 for the maximum of the sine wave and -1 for the minimum. Label the y axis.

Socratic's grapher doesn't write the #pi#s in but you should.

graph{y = sin(3x) + 0 sqrt(x) [-0.307, 9.42, -2, 2]}