Lesson 126: Derivatives of Sine and Cosine

The Calculus of Waves

Trigonometric functions describe rotation and oscillation. Their derivatives capture the "circularity" of these functions:

Notice how they loop back into each other, but with a sign change for cosine.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Basic Sine

Find the derivative of \(f(x) = 4\sin x\).

Example 2: Sum with Polynomial

Find the derivative of \(f(x) = x^3 - 2\cos x\).

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

Wavefunctions are often made of sines and cosines. If \(\psi(x) = \sin(kx)\), then its derivative is \(k\cos(kx)\). In Quantum Mechanics, the Kinetic Energy Operator involves the second derivative: \(\hat{T} = -\frac{\hbar^2}{2m} \frac{d^2}{dx^2}\). If you take the derivative of \(\sin x\) twice, you get \(-\sin x\) back. This is why sine and cosine waves are the "natural" states for particles in empty space—they keep their shape when passed through the kinetic energy operator.