asked 224k views
1 vote
c2*sin(wt)+c1*cos(wt)= A*Sin(wt+phi), where c2=Acos(Phi) and c1=Asin(Phi). They ask me to find the amplitude of the function 2 sin(4pi*t)+5 cos(4pi*t), in terms of A sin(wt+phi). How do i do this?

asked
User Djuarezg
by
8.3k points

1 Answer

4 votes

The amplitude of
A\sin(\omega t+\phi) is the absolute value of
A. So first you need to condense the given function into one sine expression.

Recall that


A\sin(\omega t+\phi)=A\sin(\omega t)\cos\phi+A\cos(\omega t)\sin\phi

so you need to choose
\phi and
\omega accordingly.

If we line up the terms of the given function with the expanded one above, we should have


2\sin(4\pi t)+5\cos(4\pi t)\implies\begin{cases}A\cos\phi=2\\A\sin\phi=5\\\omega=4\pi\end{cases}

Now, using the Pythagorean identity,


(A\sin\phi)^2+(A\cos\phi)^2=2^2+5^2\implies A^2=29\implies A=\pm√(29)

so the amplitude is √29.

Just for completeness, we also get


\tan\phi=(\sin\phi)/(\cos\phi)=\frac52\implies\phi=\tan^(-1)\left(\frac52\right)+n\pi

where
n is any integer.

answered
User Freeall
by
8.8k points
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