The moon's distance from Earth varies in a periodic way that can be modeled by a trigonometric function. When the moon is at its perigee (closest point to Earth), it's about 363,000 km away. When it's at its apogee (farthest point from Earth), it's about 406,000 k away. The moon's apogees occur 27.3 days apart. The moon will reach its apogee on January 22, 2016. Find the formula of the trigonometric function that models the distance D between Earth and the moon t days after January 1, 2016. Define the function using radians.

Jonas Huff

Jonas Huff

Answered question

2022-11-08

Confusion with modeling a trigonometric function with phase shift
I am studying trigonometry on Khan Academy and came across this problem:
The moon's distance from Earth varies in a periodic way that can be modeled by a trigonometric function.
When the moon is at its perigee (closest point to Earth), it's about 363,000 km away. When it's at its apogee (farthest point from Earth), it's about 406,000 k away. The moon's apogees occur 27.3 days apart. The moon will reach its apogee on January 22, 2016. Find the formula of the trigonometric function that models the distance D between Earth and the moon t days after January 1, 2016. Define the function using radians.
D ( t ) =
So the steps I took are:
Finding the amplitude: ( 406000 36300 ) / 2 = 21500
Finding the midline: 21500 + 36300 = 384500
Figuring out whether to use cosine or sine:
I figured that I can treat January 2nd as the beginning of the year. So I used cosine. Since at 0, a cosine function is at its max value.
4. The period: 1 year is a period so it must be 2 π / 365
5. The function without the shift is now: 21500 cos ( 2 π / 365 t ) + 384500
6. Now I must find the value of u in order to properly shift the function. I imagine that this must be t 27.3 since it is 27.3 days after January 1.
I feel like I must be missing something here or got one of the steps wrong. Please guide me in the right direction.

Answer & Explanation

kuthiwenihca

kuthiwenihca

Beginner2022-11-09Added 23 answers

Step 1
First the period is wrong. It's not 1 year. You are given that it's 27.3 days. And the phase you get from knowing that an apogee is on January 22nd, which is 21 days after January 1st. So
d = 21500 cos ( 2 π / 27.3 ( t t 0 ) ) + 384500
Step 2
So knowing when you have the maximum (at 21 days), that's the phase. Just to check, plug in t = 21 in the above equation.
Kyler Oconnor

Kyler Oconnor

Beginner2022-11-10Added 4 answers

Step 1
cos t  is the same as  sin ( t + π 2 ) . sin t  is the same as  cos ( t π 2 ) .
The sine of one number is the cosine of another, so it can be done either way with different phase shifts. The sine and cosine functions are just phase-shifted versions of each other.
The cosine function reaches its peak when its argument is 0, so you can use a cosine function of the difference between any point in time and January 22.
The period is 27.3 days, so the argument to the cosine function must increase by 2 π every time 27.3 days pass. If t is time measured in days, then ( ( t January 22 )) is how many days have passed since January 22, and ( ( t January 22 ))/27.3 is how many 27.3-day periods have passed since then, so 2 π ( t January 22 ) / 27.3 increases by 2 π every time a 27.3-day period passes. Thus you need the cosine evaluated at that argument. Thus
384500 + 21500 cos ( 2 π ( t Jannuary 22 ) 27.3 )
which is the same as
384500 + 21500 sin ( 2 π ( t Jannuary 22 ) 27.3 + π 2 ) = 384500 + 21500 sin ( 2 π ( t ( somewhat earlier date ) ) 27.3 )
Step 2
That "somewhat earlier date" must be 27.3/4 days before January 22, i.e. a quarter of a full period earlier, since π 2 is a quarter of 2 π .
The fraction of a day expressed by “⋯.3'' in “27.3'' represents 0.3  days = 7.2  hours .
So 27.3 / 4  days = 6.825  days = 7  days minus  7.2  hours = 7  hours and 12 minutes .
So for example, if 12:00 noon on January 22 is when apogee occurs, then 7:12 pm on January 15.

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