πŸ“Š Trigonometric Function Grapher

Visualize and analyze trigonometric functions with customizable parameters. Graph sine, cosine, and tangent functions with amplitude, period, and phase adjustments.

πŸ“Š 20,000+ graphs generated πŸ”„ Updated: March 2026 ⭐ 4.7/5 Rating

Understanding Trigonometric Function Graphs

Graphing trigonometric functions helps visualize their behavior, patterns, and transformations. The basic sine and cosine functions create smooth wave patterns that repeat every 2Ο€ radians (360Β°), while the tangent function has vertical asymptotes and a different period of Ο€ radians (180Β°). Understanding these graphs is essential for analyzing periodic phenomena in physics, engineering, and mathematics.

Function transformations allow you to modify the basic trigonometric graphs in predictable ways. Amplitude changes the height of the waves, period adjustments stretch or compress the function horizontally, phase shifts move the graph left or right, and vertical shifts move it up or down. These transformations are crucial for modeling real-world periodic behavior like sound waves, alternating current, and seasonal patterns.

Our interactive grapher lets you experiment with different parameters to see how they affect the function's appearance. This visual approach helps build intuition about trigonometric functions and their applications in various fields of science and engineering.

Function Parameters

Controls height of waves
Controls horizontal stretch/compression
Horizontal shift (positive = right)
Vertical shift (positive = up)

Current Function:

y = 1 Γ— sin(1x - 0) + 0

Function Graph

Graph Properties:

  • Amplitude: 1
  • Period: 6.28 radians
  • Phase Shift: 0 radians
  • Vertical Shift: 0
  • Domain: All real numbers
  • Range: [-1, 1]

Graph Visualization:

Interactive graph showing SIN function with your parameters:

X-axis: -2Ο€ to 2Ο€ | Y-axis: -5 to 5

Understanding Function Transformations

Amplitude (A)

Effect: Vertical stretch/compression

Formula: y = AΒ·sin(x)

Example: A = 2 makes waves twice as tall

Range: A > 0 (negative A reflects across x-axis)

Period (B)

Effect: Horizontal stretch/compression

Formula: y = sin(Bx)

Period: 2Ο€/B

Example: B = 2 creates two complete cycles in 2Ο€

Phase Shift (C)

Effect: Horizontal translation

Formula: y = sin(x - C)

Direction: Positive C shifts right

Example: C = Ο€/2 shifts function Ο€/2 units right

Vertical Shift (D)

Effect: Vertical translation

Formula: y = sin(x) + D

Direction: Positive D shifts up

Example: D = 1 moves entire graph up 1 unit

Real-World Applications

🌊 Sound Waves

Sound waves follow sinusoidal patterns. Amplitude represents volume, frequency relates to period, and phase differences create acoustic effects like beats and interference.

⚑ Electrical Engineering

AC current and voltage follow sine wave patterns. Understanding phase relationships is crucial for power systems, motors, and electronic circuit design.

🌑️ Climate Patterns

Temperature variations throughout the year follow sinusoidal patterns. Modeling these helps predict seasonal changes and long-term climate trends.

πŸ—οΈ Structural Engineering

Building oscillations, bridge vibrations, and earthquake responses often follow trigonometric patterns that engineers must account for in design.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find the period of a transformed function?

For a function y = AΒ·sin(Bx + C) + D, the period is 2Ο€/|B|. If B = 2, the period is Ο€, meaning the function completes one full cycle in Ο€ units instead of the normal 2Ο€. Larger B values create shorter periods (more cycles), while smaller B values create longer periods (fewer cycles).

What's the difference between phase shift and horizontal translation?

They're the same concept! Phase shift describes how much the function is shifted horizontally from its standard position. For y = sin(x - C), the phase shift is C units to the right. This is particularly important in physics when comparing wave patterns that are "out of phase" with each other.

Why does the tangent function look different from sine and cosine?

The tangent function has vertical asymptotes where cosine equals zero (at odd multiples of Ο€/2), creating discontinuous branches. Unlike sine and cosine which oscillate between fixed values, tangent increases without bound as it approaches each asymptote, then jumps to negative infinity on the other side.