Suppose that period of $f(x)=T$ and period of $g(x)=S$, I am interested what is a period of $f(x) g(x)$? period of $f(x)+g(x)$? What I have tried is to search in internet, and found following link for this.
Also I know that period of $\sin(x)$ is $2\pi$, but what about $\sin^2(x)$? Does it have period again $\pi n$, or? example is following function $y=\frac{\sin^2(x)}{\cos(x)}$ i can do following thing, namely we know that $\sin(x)/\cos(x)=\tan(x)$ and period of tangent function is $\pi$, so I can represent $y=\sin^2(x)/\cos(x)$ as $y=\tan(x)\times\sin(x)$,but how can calculate period of this?
Please help me.
We make a few comments only.
But $\sin x$ has many other periods, such as $4\pi$, $6\pi$, and so on. However, $\sin x$ has no (positive) period shorter than $2\pi$.
So for example, if $f(x)$ has $5\pi$ as a period, and $g(x)$ has $7\pi$ as a period, then $f(x)+g(x)$ and $f(x)g(x)$ each have $35\pi$ as a period. However, even if $5\pi$ is the shortest period of $f(x)$ and $7\pi$ is the shortest period of $g(x)$, the number $35\pi$ need not be the shortest period of $f(x)+g(x)$ or $f(x)g(x)$.
We already had an example of this phenomenon: the shortest period of $\sin x$ is $2\pi$, while the shortest period of $(\sin x)(\sin x)$ is $\pi$. Here is a more dramatic example. Let $f(x)=\sin x$, and $g(x)=-\sin x$. Each function has smallest period $2\pi$. But their sum is the $0$-function, which has every positive number $p$ as a period!