Periodic behavior can be illustrated through both common, everyday examples and more formal mathematical functions.
Real-valued functions Functions that map real numbers to real numbers can display periodicity, which is often visualized on a graph.
Sawtooth wave An example is the function f that represents the "
fractional part" of its argument. Its period is 1. For instance, : f(0.5) = f(1.5) = f(2.5) = \cdots = 0.5 The graph of the function f is a
sawtooth wave.
Trigonometric functions The trigonometric functions are common examples of periodic functions. The
sine function and
cosine function are periodic with a fundamental period of 2\pi, as illustrated in the figure to the right. For the sine function, this is expressed as: : \sin(x + 2\pi) = \sin x for all values of x. The field of
Fourier series investigates the concept that an arbitrary periodic function can be expressed as a sum of trigonometric functions with matching periods.
Exotic functions Some functions are periodic but possess properties that make them less intuitive. The
Dirichlet function, for example, is periodic, with any nonzero rational number serving as a period. However, it does not possess a fundamental period.
Complex-valued functions Functions with a domain in the
complex numbers can exhibit more complex periodic properties.
Complex exponential The complex exponential function is a periodic function with a purely imaginary period: :e^{ikx} = \cos kx + i\,\sin kx Given that the cosine and sine functions are both periodic with period 2\pi,
Euler's formula demonstrates that the complex exponential function has a period L such that :L = \frac{2\pi}{k}.
Double-periodic functions A function on the complex plane can have two distinct, incommensurate periods without being a constant function. The
elliptic functions are a primary example of such functions. ("Incommensurate" in this context refers to periods that are not real multiples of each other.) ==Properties==