This article is about a particular function from a subset of the real numbers to the real numbers. Information about the function, including its domain, range, and key data relating to graphing, differentiation, and integration, is presented in the article.
View a complete list of particular functions on this wiki
For functions involving angles (trigonometric functions, inverse trigonometric functions, etc.) we follow the convention that all angles are measured in radians. Thus, for instance, the angle of
is measured as
.
Definition
Unit circle definition
The sine function, denoted
, is defined as follows.
Consider the unit circle centered at the origin, described as the following subset of the coordinate:
For a real number
, we define
as follows:
- Start at the point
, which lies on the unit circle centered at the origin.
- Move a distance of
along the unit circle in the counter-clockwise direction (i.e., the motion begins in the first quadrant, with both coordinates positive).
- At the end, the
-coordinate of the point thus obtained is defined as
.
Triangle ratio definition (works for acute angles)
For an acute angle
, i.e., for
in the open interval
,
can be defined as follows:
- Construct any right triangle with one of the acute angles equal to
.
is the ratio of the leg opposite to the angle
to the hypotenuse.
Key data
| Item |
Value
|
| default domain |
all real numbers, i.e., all of
|
| range |
the closed interval
|
| period |
, i.e., .
|
| mean value over a period |
0
|
| local maximum values and points of attainment |
local maximum value attained at all points of the form , with value 1 at each point.
|
| local minimum values and points of attainment |
local minimum value attained at all points of the form , with value -1 at each point.
|
| points of inflection (both coordinates) |
all points of the form with .
|
| important symmetries |
odd function. More generally, half turn symmetry about all points of the form where . Also, mirror symmetry about all lines of the form .
|
| first derivative |
, i.e., the cosine function
|
| second derivative |
, i.e., the negative of the sine function.
|
| sequence of derivatives |
starting from first: . The sequence of higher derivatives is periodic with a period of 4.
|
| first antiderivative |
, i.e., the negative of the cosine function.
|
Identities
| Type of identity |
Identity in algebraic form
|
| complementary angle |
, equivalently,
|
| square relationship with cosine |
.
|
| angle sum sine formula |
|
| angle difference sine formula |
|
| product to sum conversion |
|
| sum to product conversion |
|
| double angle sine formula |
|
| double angle cosine formula |
, so .
|
| other symmetries |
periodicity:  anti-periodicity:  odd:  mirror symmetry about :
|
Related functions
Composition with other functions
Below are some composite functions of the form
for suitable function
:
Differentiation
First derivative
We deduce the formula
from the limit:
Here's the full proof:
By the fact that limit is linear, the above limit can be rewritten as:
We now need to compute the two limits individually. Note first that both limits are independent of
.
The first limit is:
We've thus expressed the limit as a product of limits where one of the factors goes to zero and the other goes to one, so the limit is zero.
The second limit is 1, as can be seen directly.
We thus get that the answer is:
This simplifies to
Second derivative
The derivative of
is
, so we obtain:
Higher derivatives
The sequence of derivatives is periodic with period 4:
 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
In particular, we obtain that for any nonnegative integer
:




Equivalently, we also have:
In other words, differentiating the function
times is equivalent to shifting the graph
to the left.
Integration
First antiderivative
We have:
Definite integrals
The mean value of
over a period is 0. Thus:
Since
is odd, the mean value over any interval symmetric about the origin is zero:
Also, the integral of
on
and on
is 1 each, giving a mean value of
on these intervals:
Integration of transformed versions of function
We have, for
, the following, using integration of linear transform of function:
Further, the mean value of
over a period is 0.
Higher antiderivatives
The general expression for the second antiderivative is:
In general, the
antiderivative is
or
, depending on the value of
mod 4. The general expression is the particular antiderivative plus an arbitrary polynomial of degree at most
.
Power series and Taylor series
Computation of Taylor series
As noted above, we have that:
In particular, this means that:
Thus, the sequence of derivatives at zero (starting from
) is
.
The Taylor series is thus:
Taylor series equals power series
There are a number of ways of showing that the Taylor series for the sine function does in fact converge to the function everywhere. One of these follows from the max-estimate on the remainder term from the Taylor polyonmials. Since the sine function is a bounded function, this max-estimate approaches zero as
.
Thus we have that: