For 0 <= x <= 360^@0x360, how would you find the coordinates of the points of intersection with the coordinate axes of y = sin(x - 45^@)y=sin(x45)?

1 Answer
Mar 3, 2017

Find the intersection points of the function f(x)=sin(x-45°) with the lines y=0 (x-axis) and x=0 (y-axis)

Explanation:

1. Intersection with y-axis
Let x=0 in f(x)
f(x)=sin(0-45°)
f(x)=sin(-45°)

On the function sinx, where does x=-45° or 315°?

Using the unit circle, sin45°=sqrt(2)/2 so since we are going in the opposite direction -45° instead of +45° and sinx is the vertical height, the sign must be the opposite, thus sin-45°=-sqrt(2)/2
Therefore intersection with y-axis is at point (0,-sqrt(2)/2)

2. Intersection with x-axis
Let y=0 in f(x)
0=sin(x-45°)

On the function sinx, when does sinx=0?

Using the unit circle, sinx=0 when x is 0°, 180°, or 360°

Therefore x-45°=0, x-45°=180, x-45°=360
x=45°, x=225°, x=405°
However, 405° is not inside the domain so x cannot be greater than 360° so this number is excluded. All other numbers lie in between 0 and 360 so they're fine.

Therefore intersection with x-axis is at points (45°, 0) and (225°,0)

Hope this helped!