Additional Maths Tuition

O-Level A-Maths Trigonometric Graphs – Amplitude & Period

Source: O-Level Additional Mathematics 2024 Paper 1

Introduction

This question tests a core trigonometric graph skill that appears very frequently in O-Level A-Maths:

  • Identifying amplitude
  • Identifying period
  • Understanding how coefficients affect graphs

We follow the teacher’s exact board working.

 

The Question

State the amplitude and period of:

\(y = 4 \cos 2x\)

 

Step-by-Step Working (Teacher’s Method)

Step 1: Identify the amplitude

The general form of a cosine graph is:

\(y = a \cos(bx)\)
  • The amplitude is the absolute value of \(a\).

Here: \(a = 4\)

So, Amplitude = 4

Step 2: Identify the period

For cosine graphs:

\(\text{Period} = \frac{360^\circ}{b} \quad \text{or} \quad \frac{2\pi}{b}\)

In this question: \(b = 2\)

So:

\(\text{Period} = \frac{360^\circ}{2} = 180^\circ\)
\(\text{Period} = \frac{2\pi}{2} = \pi\)

 

✅ Final Answer

Amplitude: 4
Period: \(180^\circ\) or \(\pi\)

 

Key Concepts

ConceptWhy It Matters
AmplitudeDetermines graph height
Coefficient of \(x\)Controls period
Trigonometric graph rulesCommon exam-tested knowledge
Degree vs radianBoth answers often accepted

 

Tips for Students

  • Amplitude is always the number in front
  • Period depends on the value multiplying \(x\)
  • Memorise: \(\tfrac{360^\circ}{b}\) or \(\tfrac{2\pi}{b}\)
  • Write units clearly (degrees or radians)

 

For Parents

Trigonometric graph questions are high scoring when students master:

  • Formula recall
  • Conceptual understanding
  • Exam accuracy

These skills directly impact Paper 1 performance.

 

Want your child to master O-Level A-Maths confidently?
Book a Free Trial Lesson with MasterMaths today!
Frequently Asked Questions

Only if the question asks for it.

Yes — both are accepted unless specified.

\(\text{Period} = \frac{360^\circ}{b} \quad \text{or} \quad \frac{2\pi}{b}\)

The most common mistake is writing the period as 360° directly, instead of dividing by the coefficient \(b\). For example, in \(y = 4\cos(2x)\), students often forget to divide by 2, and wrongly state the period as 360° instead of the correct 180°.