Find L{f(t)} by first using an appropriate trigonometric identity. L is the symbol for Laplace transformation. f(t)=sin(2t)cos(2t) Laplace transform equation: L{f(t)}=int_0^infty e^(-st)f(t)dt

Bernard Boyer

Bernard Boyer

Answered question

2022-07-30

Find L{f(t)} by first using an appropriate trigonometric identity. L is the symbol for Laplace transformation.
f ( t ) = sin ( 2 t ) cos ( 2 t )
Laplace transform equation: L { f ( t ) } = 0 e s t f ( t ) d t

Answer & Explanation

Rihanna Robles

Rihanna Robles

Beginner2022-07-31Added 18 answers

A good trick here is to use a trig identity to separate your f(t) into a simple form.
sin ( 2 t ) + cos ( 2 t ) = 1 / 2 sin ( 2 t + 2 t ) + 1 / 2 sin ( 2 t 2 t ) = 1 / 2 sin ( 4 t )
Now, you can plug this into your integral. To double check your answer you can use the table of laplace transforms, you canfind this anywhere on the internet, just google it. and from there you can easy convert things into laplace domain, provided you have them in the correct form.
so L 1 / 2 s i n ( 4 t ) = 1 / 2 4 / ( s 2 + 4 2 )

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?