Waves that Don't Wiggle
Just as sine and cosine describe points on a circle, Hyperbolic Functions describe points on a hyperbola. They look like "non-oscillating" versions of trig functions.
- Sinh (Hyperbolic Sine): \(\sinh(x) = \frac{e^x - e^{-x}}{2}\)
- Cosh (Hyperbolic Cosine): \(\cosh(x) = \frac{e^x + e^{-x}}{2}\)
- Tanh (Hyperbolic Tangent): \(\frac{\sinh(x)}{\cosh(x)}\)
The Pythagorean Identity of Hyperbolas
For standard trig, \(\cos^2 + \sin^2 = 1\). For hyperbolic functions:
\[\cosh^2(x) - \sinh^2(x) = 1\]
Worked Examples
Example 1: Graphing Cosh
The graph of \(\cosh(x)\) looks like a "U" shape. This is the exact shape formed by a heavy chain hanging between two poles (called a Catenary).
Example 2: Relationship to Trig
\(\sin(ix) = i \sinh(x)\) and \(\cos(ix) = \cosh(x)\). Imaginary angles turn circles into hyperbolas!
The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics
In Quantum Mechanics, when a particle hits a wall it cannot pass through, its wavefunction doesn't oscillate—it Decays. This "Evanescent Wave" is described using hyperbolic functions. If the wall is a "Barrier" (Chapter 11), we use \(\sinh\) and \(\cosh\) to calculate the probability of the particle tunneling to the other side. Hyperbolic functions are the math of "Forbidden Regions"—spots where the particle's energy is lower than the potential energy. They describe how quantum objects "leak" through solid matter.