How do you graph y = 1/2cos( 4x )?

1 Answer
Sep 21, 2015

See explanation, graph{(1/2)cos (4x) [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

Explanation:

You have: y=1/2 cos(4x)

Well, the easiest way is to start from the known function cos(x)
which can be drawn as such:
graph{cos x [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

The cosine function is 1 at x=0.
The cosine function is 0 at x=pi/2.

That is, our function will be 0 when the inner term of the cosine function reaches pi/2.
But we have (4x) inside our cosine.
So this means that our cosine function reaches 0
when 4x=pi/2
or after rearranging, when
x=pi/8 (and -pi/8 and so on).

The following is the graph of cos(4x):
graph{cos (4x) [-10, 10, -5, 5]}
The factor "4" actually compresses the cosine wave along the x-axis.
(Note: if the factor were between 0 and 1, say, for example, 0.5, then cos(0.5x) would expand the cosine wave along the x-axis.)

Finally, we have an external multiplicative factor of 1/2, which compresses the "height" of our cosine wave (along the y-axis this time) in half.
graph{(1/2)cos (4x) [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

That's it. Hope this helps.