x-coordinate rule
Sets the horizontal motion as a function of the parameter t.
Concept module
Keep x(t), y(t), the traced path, and the moving point visible together so shape and traversal stay distinct.
The simulation shows a parametric curve, a moving point, and controls for amplitudes, frequencies, and phase shift. The point moves through the same plane where the whole path is traced. At t = 0, the point is near (3.2, 0). The path spans about 6.4 units wide and 4.8 units tall. The point is moving at a moderate speed through the traced path.
Interactive lab
Keep the stage, graph, and immediate control feedback in one working view.
Time
0.00 s / 6.28 sLivePause to inspect a specific moment, then step or scrub through it.Parametric curves and motion
Keep x(t), y(t), the traced path, and the moving point tied together so shape and traversal do not collapse into the same idea.
Graphs
Switch graph views without breaking the live stage and time link.
Coordinates vs time
One graph shows x(t) and y(t) together, and a second graph shows the point's speed over time.
Controls
Adjust the live parameters and watch the bench respond.
More tools
Secondary controls, alternate presets, and less-used toggles stay nearby without crowding the main bench.
Presets
Predict -> manipulate -> observe
Keep the active prompt next to the controls so each change has an immediate visible consequence.
Equation map
Select a symbol to highlight the matching control and the graph or overlay it most directly changes.
Sets how far the path stretches horizontally.
Equations in play
Choose an equation to sync the active symbol, control highlight, and related graph mapping.
More tools
Detailed noticing prompts, guided overlays, and challenge tasks stay available without taking over the main bench.
What to notice
Keep the traced curve and the moving point visible together.
Guided overlays
Focus one overlay at a time to see what it represents and what to notice in the live motion.
Overlay focus
Keep the complete traced curve visible.
What to notice
Why it matters
It separates the path from the moving point.
Challenge mode
Build the shape first, then respect the timing of the moving point.
3 of 8 checks
The checklist updates from the live simulation state, active graph, overlays, inspect time, and compare setup.
x-coordinate rule
Sets the horizontal motion as a function of the parameter t.
y-coordinate rule
Sets the vertical motion and allows a phase offset.
Speed along the path
Separates the point's motion from the path it happens to trace.
Progress
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Jump to a named bench state or copy the one you are looking at now. Shared links reopen the same controls, graph, overlays, and compare context.
Saved setups
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Stable links
Starter track
Step 2 of 20 / 2 completeEarlier steps still set up Parametric Curves / Motion from Equations.
Previous step: Complex Numbers on the Plane.
Short explanation
Parametric curves become easier to trust when the path and the motion along that path stay visible together. This bench keeps x(t), y(t), the traced curve, and the moving point tied to the same time slider.
The goal is to separate two ideas that often blur together: the shape traced out in the plane and the timing of how the point moves through that shape.
Key ideas
Worked example
Live worked examples are available on Premium. You can still read the full frozen walkthrough on the free tier.
View plans3.2
2.4
0
1. Start from the current time
2. Read x(t) and y(t) together
3. Place that pair on the plane
Current point
Common misconception
If the curve looks the same, the motion along it must also be the same.
The traced path and the time-progress along it are related but not identical ideas.
The same kind of curve can be traversed at different speeds or with different timing between x and y.
Mini challenge
Prediction prompt
Check your reasoning
Quick test
Misconception check
Question 1 of 2
Choose one answer to reveal feedback, then test the idea in the live system if a guided example is available.
Accessible description
The simulation shows a parametric curve, a moving point, and controls for amplitudes, frequencies, and phase shift. The point moves through the same plane where the whole path is traced.
Graph summary
One graph shows x(t) and y(t) together, and a second graph shows the point's speed over time.
Read next
These suggestions come from the concept registry, so the reason label reflects either curated guidance or the fallback progression logic.
Combine, subtract, and scale vectors on one plane so magnitude, direction, and components stay tied to the same live object.
Read complex numbers as points and vectors on one plane, then keep addition and multiplication geometric instead of symbolic-only.
Launch a projectile, watch the trajectory form, and connect the range, height, and component motion to the launch settings.