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1.4: El Periodo de una Función Periódica

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    70222
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    Se dice que una función\(f(x)\) es periódica con periodo\(P\) si\(f(x) = f(x + P)\). En inglés sencillo, la función se repite en intervalos regulares de longitud\(P\). El periodo de la función de Figura\(\PageIndex{1}\) es\(2 \pi\).

    Screen Shot 2019-10-18 en 2.41.42 PM.png
    Figura\(\PageIndex{4}\): Una función periódica con periodo\(P = 2 \pi\) (CC BY-NC-SA; Marcia Levitus)

    Sabemos que el periodo de\(\sin (x)\) es\(2 \pi\), pero ¿cuál es el periodo de la función\(\sin (nx)\)?

    El periodo de\(\sin (x)\) es\(2 \pi\), entonces:

    \[\sin (nx) = \sin (nx + 2 \pi) \nonumber\]

    Por definición, para una función periódica de punto\(P\), la función se repite si agregamos\(P\) a\(x\):

    \[ sin (nx) = \sin (n(x + P)) = \sin (nx + nP)) \nonumber\]

    Comparando las dos ecuaciones:\(2 \pi = nP\), y por lo tanto\(\textcolor{red}{P = 2π/n}\).

    Por ejemplo, el periodo de\(\sin (2x)\) es\(\pi\), y el periodo de\(\sin (3x)\) es\(2 \pi/3\) (ver Figura\(\PageIndex{2}\)).

    Screen Shot 2019-10-18 en 2.42.41 PM.png
    Figura\(\PageIndex{2}\): Algunos ejemplos de la familia de funciones\(\sin (nx)\). De izquierda a derecha:\(\sin (x)\),\(\sin (2x)\),\(\sin (3x)\) y\(\sin (10x)\) (CC BY-NC-SA; Marcia Levitus)

    Se puede seguir la misma lógica para demostrar que el periodo de\(\cos (nx)\) es\(2 \pi/n\). Estos son resultados importantes que utilizaremos más adelante en el semestre, ¡así que tenlos en mente!

    ¡Ponte a prueba con este breve cuestionario! http://tinyurl.com/k4wop6l


    This page titled 1.4: El Periodo de una Función Periódica is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Marcia Levitus via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.