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Concept module

Parametric Curves / Motion from Equations

Keep x(t), y(t), the traced path, and the moving point visible together so shape and traversal stay distinct.

Interactive lab

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Starter track

Step 6 of 60 / 6 complete

Complex and Parametric Motion

Earlier steps still set up Parametric Curves / Motion from Equations.

1. Complex Numbers on the Plane2. Unit Circle / Sine and Cosine from Rotation3. Polar Coordinates / Radius and Angle4. Trig Identities from Unit-Circle Geometry+2 more steps

Previous step: Inverse Trig / Angle from Ratio.

Why it behaves this way

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

01x(t) and y(t) work together to determine one moving point in the plane.
02Changing amplitudes changes the size of the traced path, while changing frequencies changes how the point traverses it.
03A path can stay the same overall shape while the point speeds up and slows down along it.

Frozen walkthrough

Step through the frozen example

Frozen walkthrough
Use the current parametric bench instead of a detached substitution problem.

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Frozen valuesUsing frozen parameters

At the current time, where is the point on the parametric curve?

x amplitude

3.2

y amplitude

2.4

Phase shift

0

1. Start from the current time

The current time is t = 0.

2. Read x(t) and y(t) together

At this moment, x(t) = 3.2 and y(t) = 0.

3. Place that pair on the plane

So the moving point is at (3.2, 0) on the traced curve.

Current point

The point is moving at a moderate speed here, so the curve and the motion cue still feel tightly linked.

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

Build a path that is taller than it is wide, then catch the point near the y-axis while it is still moving quickly.

Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.

Decide whether amplitudes or frequencies control the shape and which settings mostly affect the speed.

Check your reasoning against the live bench.

The amplitudes set the width and height, while the frequencies and current time help determine how fast the point is moving at a given place.
That is why the same idea has both a path shape and a traversal story.

Quick test

Misconception check

Question 1 of 2

Answer from the live curve and motion cues.

Which statement best separates the curve from the motion along it?

Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.