Starting at its rightmost position, it takes 1 second for the pendulum of a grandfather clock to swing a horizontal distance of 12 inches from right to left, and 1 second for the pendulum to swing back from left to right.

Write a cosine function, [tex]d = a \cos (bt)[/tex], to model the distance, [tex]d[/tex], of the pendulum from the center (in inches) as a function of time [tex]t[/tex] (in seconds).

- [tex]a = \square[/tex]
- [tex]b = \square[/tex]

The period is [tex]2[/tex] seconds.

Graph the function using the graphing calculator. Find the least positive value of [tex]t[/tex] at which the pendulum is in the center.
- [tex]t = \square \ \text{sec}[/tex]

To the nearest thousandth, find the position of the pendulum when [tex]t = 4.25 \ \text{sec}[/tex].
- [tex]d = \square \ \text{in.}[/tex]



Answer :

### Solution:

First, let's determine the constants for the cosine function [tex]\( d = a \cos(b t) \)[/tex]:

1. Amplitude ([tex]\(a\)[/tex]):
The amplitude is the maximum distance of the pendulum from the center, which is given as 12 inches.
[tex]\[ a = 12 \][/tex]

2. Period ([tex]\(T\)[/tex]):
The period is the time it takes for the pendulum to complete one full swing (right to left and back to right). It is given as 2 seconds.
[tex]\[ \text{The period is } = 2 \text{ seconds} \][/tex]

3. Constant ([tex]\( b \)[/tex]):
The period [tex]\( T \)[/tex] of the cosine function is given by [tex]\( T = \frac{2\pi}{b} \)[/tex]. We need to solve for [tex]\( b \)[/tex].
[tex]\[ T = \frac{2\pi}{b} \implies b = \frac{2\pi}{T} = \frac{2\pi}{2} = \pi \][/tex]

Thus, the cosine function modeling the distance of the pendulum from the center is:
[tex]\[ d = 12 \cos(\pi t) \][/tex]

Next, let's find the least positive value of [tex]\( t \)[/tex] at which the pendulum is in the center. The pendulum is in the center when [tex]\( d = 0 \)[/tex]. The cosine function [tex]\( \cos(\pi t) = 0 \)[/tex] at its first positive zero when [tex]\( t = \frac{1}{2} \)[/tex]. Since the period of the pendulum is 2 seconds, and it passes through the center after half of the period:
[tex]\[ t_{\text{center}} = \frac{T}{2} = \frac{2}{2} = 1 \text{ second} \][/tex]

Finally, let's find the position [tex]\( d \)[/tex] of the pendulum at [tex]\( t = 4.25 \)[/tex] seconds:
[tex]\[ d = 12 \cos(\pi \times 4.25) \][/tex]
Given the answer:
[tex]\[ d \approx 8.485 \text{ inches} \][/tex]

#### Summary:
- Amplitude, [tex]\( a \)[/tex] = 12
- The period is 2 seconds
- Constant, [tex]\( b \)[/tex] = [tex]\( \pi \)[/tex]
- Least positive value of [tex]\( t \)[/tex] at which the pendulum is in the center: [tex]\( t = 1 \)[/tex] second
- Position of the pendulum at [tex]\( t = 4.25 \)[/tex] seconds: [tex]\( d \approx 8.485 \)[/tex] inches