Moving Up and Down
A Vertical Shift (\(D\)) moves the entire wave up or down. In physics, this represents the Equilibrium Point or the "Resting State" of the system.
Equation: \(y = A \sin(Bx - C) + D\)
Worked Examples
Example 1: Shifting the Center
Graph \(y = \sin(x) + 2\).
- The centerline is now at \(y = 2\).
- The wave goes up to \(2 + 1 = 3\) and down to \(2 - 1 = 1\).
Example 2: All Transformations Combined
Identify all features of \(y = 3\cos(2x) - 4\).
- Amplitude = 3
- Period = \(2\pi/2 = \pi\)
- Vertical Shift = -4 (Down 4)
- Phase Shift = 0
The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics
In Quantum Mechanics, the vertical shift corresponds to the Potential Energy (\(V\)) of the environment. If a particle is moving through a region with a potential energy of 10 Electron Volts, the entire wavefunction is "shifted" in energy by that amount. This shift doesn't change the shape (momentum) of the wave, but it changes how it interacts with other regions. Understanding vertical shifts is how we calculate how much "voltage" or "force" is needed to trap or move a quantum particle.