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{{Short description|Non-sinusoidal waveform}} {{Infobox mathematical function | name = Triangle wave | image = triangle-td and fd.svg | imagesize = 400px | imagealt = A bandlimited triangle wave pictured in the time domain and frequency domain. | caption = A [[Bandlimiting|bandlimited]] triangle wave<ref name="bandlimited-synthesis">{{cite conference |title=LP-BLIT: Bandlimited Impulse Train Synthesis of Lowpass-filtered Waveforms |last1=Kraft |first1=Sebastian |last2=ZΓΆlzer |first2=Udo |date=5 September 2017 |book-title=Proceedings of the 20th [[International Conference on Digital Audio Effects]] (DAFx-17) |pages=255β259 |location=Edinburgh |conference=20th International Conference on Digital Audio Effects (DAFx-17) |conference-url=http://www.dafx17.eca.ed.ac.uk/}}</ref> pictured in the time domain (top) and frequency domain (bottom). The fundamental is at 220 Hz (A<sub>3</sub>). | general_definition = <math>x(t) = 4 \left\vert t - \left\lfloor t + 3/4 \right\rfloor + 1/4 \right\vert - 1</math> | fields_of_application = Electronics, synthesizers | domain = <math>\mathbb{R}</math> | codomain = <math>\left[ -1, 1 \right]</math> | parity = Odd | period = 1 | root = <math>\left\{ \tfrac{n}{2} \right\}, n \in \mathbb{Z}</math> | derivative = [[Square wave (waveform)|Square wave]] | fourier_series = <math>x(t) = -\frac{8}{{\pi}^{2}}\sum_{k=1}^{\infty} \frac{{\left( -1 \right)}^{k}}{\left( 2 k - 1 \right)^{2}} \sin \left(2 \pi \left( 2 k - 1 \right) t\right)</math> }} {{Listen|filename=220 Hz anti-aliased triangle wave.ogg|title=Triangle wave sound sample|description=5 seconds of triangle wave at 220 Hz|format=[[Ogg]]}} {{Listen|filename=Additive_220Hz_Triangle_Wave.wav|title=Additive Triangle wave sound sample|description=After each second, a harmonic is added to a sine wave creating a triangle 220 Hz wave|format=[[Ogg]]}} A '''triangular wave''' or '''triangle wave''' is a [[non-sinusoidal waveform]] named for its [[Triangle|triangular]] shape. It is a [[periodic function|periodic]], [[piecewise linear function|piecewise linear]], [[continuous function|continuous]] [[function of a real variable|real function]]. Like a [[Square wave (waveform)|square wave]], the triangle wave contains only odd [[harmonic]]s. However, the higher harmonics [[roll-off|roll off]] much faster than in a square wave (proportional to the inverse square of the harmonic number as opposed to just the inverse). ==Definitions== [[Image:Waveforms.svg|thumb|400px|[[sine wave|Sine]], [[Square wave (waveform)|square]], triangle, and [[sawtooth wave|sawtooth]] waveforms]] === Definition === A triangle wave of period ''p'' that spans the range [0, 1] is defined as <math display="block">x(t) = 2 \left| \frac{t}{p} - \left\lfloor \frac{t}{p} + \frac{1}{2} \right\rfloor \right|,</math> where <math>\lfloor\ \rfloor</math> is the [[Floor and ceiling functions|floor function]]. This can be seen to be the absolute value of a shifted [[sawtooth wave]]. For a triangle wave spanning the range {{closed-closed|β1, 1}} the expression becomes <math display="block">x(t)= 2 \left | 2 \left( \frac{t}{p} - \left\lfloor \frac{t}{p} + \frac{1}{2} \right\rfloor \right) \right| - 1.</math> [[File:Triangle wave with amplitude=5, period=4.png|right|thumb|Triangle wave with amplitude = 5, period = 4]] A more general equation for a triangle wave with amplitude <math>a</math> and period <math>p</math> using the [[modulo operation]] and [[absolute value]] is <math display="block">y(x) = \frac{4a}{p} \left| \left( \left(x - \frac{p}{4}\right) \bmod p \right) - \frac{p}{2} \right| - a.</math> For example, for a triangle wave with amplitude 5 and period 4: <math display="block">y(x) = 5 \left| \bigl( (x - 1) \bmod 4 \bigr) - 2 \right| - 5.</math> A phase shift can be obtained by altering the value of the <math>-p/4</math> term, and the vertical offset can be adjusted by altering the value of the <math>-a</math> term. As this only uses the modulo operation and absolute value, it can be used to simply implement a triangle wave on hardware electronics. Note that in many programming languages, the <code>%</code> operator is a remainder operator (with result the same sign as the dividend), not a [[modulo operation#In programming languages|modulo operator]]; the modulo operation can be obtained by using <code>((x % p) + p) % p</code> in place of <code>x % p</code>. In e.g. JavaScript, this results in an equation of the form <code>4*a/p * Math.abs((((x - p/4) % p) + p) % p - p/2) - a</code>. === Relation to the square wave === The triangle wave can also be expressed as the [[integral]] of the [[Square wave (waveform)|square wave]]: <math display="block">x(t) = \int_0^t \sgn\left(\sin\frac{u}{p}\right)\,du.</math> === Expression in trigonometric functions === A triangle wave with period ''p'' and amplitude ''a'' can be expressed in terms of [[sine]] and [[arcsine]] (whose value ranges from β''Ο''/2 to ''Ο''/2): <math display="block">y(x) = \frac{2a}{\pi} \arcsin\left(\sin\left(\frac{2\pi}{p}x\right)\right).</math> The identity <math display="inline">\cos{x} = \sin\left(\frac{p}{4}-x\right)</math> can be used to convert from a triangle "sine" wave to a triangular "cosine" wave. This phase-shifted triangle wave can also be expressed with [[cosine]] and [[arccosine]]: <math display="block">y(x) = a - \frac{2a}{\pi} \arccos\left(\cos\left(\frac{2\pi}{p}x\right)\right).</math> === Expressed as alternating linear functions === Another definition of the triangle wave, with range from β1 to 1 and period ''p'', is <math display="block">x(t) = \frac{4}{p} \left(t - \frac{p}{2} \left\lfloor\frac{2t}{p} + \frac{1}{2} \right\rfloor \right)(-1)^\left\lfloor\frac{2 t}{p} + \frac{1}{2} \right\rfloor.</math> ===Harmonics=== [[Image:Synthesis triangle.gif|thumb|upright=1.6|right|Animation of the additive synthesis of a triangle wave with an increasing number of harmonics. See [[Fourier Transform|Fourier Analysis]] for a mathematical description. ]] It is possible to approximate a triangle wave with [[additive synthesis]] by summing odd harmonics of the fundamental while multiplying every other odd harmonic by β1 (or, equivalently, changing its phase by {{pi}}) and multiplying the amplitude of the harmonics by one over the square of their mode number, {{math|''n''}} (which is equivalent to one over the square of their relative frequency to the [[fundamental frequency|fundamental]]). The above can be summarised mathematically as follows: <math display="block"> x_\text{triangle}(t) = \frac8{\pi^2} \sum_{i=0}^{N - 1} \frac{(-1)^i}{n^2} \sin(2\pi f_0 n t), </math> where {{mvar|N}} is the number of harmonics to include in the approximation, {{mvar|t}} is the independent variable (e.g. time for sound waves), <math>f_0</math> is the fundamental frequency, and {{mvar|i}} is the harmonic label which is related to its mode number by <math>n = 2i + 1</math>. This infinite [[Fourier series]] converges quickly to the triangle wave as {{mvar|N}} tends to infinity, as shown in the animation. ==Arc length== The [[arc length]] per period for a triangle wave, denoted by ''s'', is given in terms of the amplitude ''a'' and period length ''p'' by <math display="block">s = \sqrt{(4a)^2 + p^2}.</math> ==See also== * [[List of periodic functions]] * [[Sine wave]] * [[Square wave (waveform)|Square wave]] * [[Sawtooth wave]] * [[Pulse wave]] * [[Sound]] * [[Triangle function]] * [[Wave]] * [[Zigzag]] ==References== {{Reflist}} *{{MathWorld|id=FourierSeriesTriangleWave|title=Fourier Series - Triangle Wave}} {{Waveforms}} {{Use dmy dates|date=July 2019}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Triangle Wave}} [[Category:Fourier series]] [[Category:Waveforms]]
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