And I know sinusoids are not the same thing as the curve of a circle...........I was brainstorming like I am now....................................but this does match up........much of it anyways.........
Also.........1 and - 1.........................2 to the i........................the hyp of which is the value........has TWO values.........from my point of view...........the square root of 8 and the square root of 10...........an approx. for e and pi.........respectively....................9 is always 9.....by the P theorem................b/c 2 to the i.........along the X axis.......is a distance of 3.............like the start of pi...........................it becomes 9.................b/c u square it.................so it stays the same........the only thing that changes and why u have the square root of 8 and the square root of 10........is I used the height above - 1..........for one right triangle as 1..........and the other as i...........i square is - 1.............1 squared is one...........1..........9 - 1 = 8..............9 + 1 = 10...............................surprising connections between numbers...........
Not only is that similar to the sine function............b/c it repeats every TWO pi...........2 being the start of the primes.........the 1st one.........................it mimics the two places for e and pi...............e and pi itself.....................form a sort of balance at 3.........the distance along the X axis............and the approx. of such..................are on either side of 9............which is 3 squared.............a line at 1/2............square roots and squares...........they undo each other..................are self similar.........they repeat...........chaos theory.........the square root of 8 repeats for the 1st 4 numbers............two pairs......of 28...........sine waves repeat every 2pi........chaos theory...............
In mathematics, the sine is a trigonometric function of an angle. The sine of an acute angle is defined in the context of a right triangle: for the specified angle, it is the ratio of the length of the side that is opposite that angle to the length of the longest side of the triangle (the hypotenuse).
Sine - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sine
Sine -- from Wolfram MathWorld
mathworld.wolfram.com › ... › Special Functions › Trigonometric Functions
by EW Weisstein - 2002 - Cited by 8 - Related articles
The sine function is one of the basic functions encountered in trigonometry (the others being the cosecant, cosine, cotangent, secant, and tangent). Let be an angle measured counterclockwise from the x-axis along an arc of the unit circle.
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Sine - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sine
Jump to Other trigonometric functions - In mathematics, the sine is a trigonometric function of an angle. The sine of an acute angle is defined in the context of a right triangle: for the specified angle, it is the ratio of the length of the side that is opposite that angle to the length of the longest side of the triangle (the hypotenuse).
Period: 2π
Parity: odd
At zero: 0
Fixed point: 0
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