What's so special about sine? (Concerning $y'' = -y$)

This answer is perhaps more suited to physics.SE, but anyways.

I can see why you're wondering about the "specialness" of y'' = -y (or more generally -ky). Let me try to give an explanation of why it shows up all over the place.

Imagine a ball sitting at the bottom of a round well (looking like a U), its equation of motion is $y = 0$, its height is constant and not changing (let's say it is 0). Imagine you disturb this ball very slightly, you raise it to a very small height $\epsilon$ along the wall of the well. There's a force that will act on it to return it to 0. This force is a function of $\epsilon$, $F(\epsilon)$.

We can expand $F(\epsilon) = a_0 + a_1 \epsilon + a_2 \epsilon^2 + ...$ Noting that F(0) = 0, we get $a_0 = 0$. Since $\epsilon$ is small, $\epsilon^2$ and all higher powers are just very small.. So we will ignore them. So we get $F(\epsilon) \approx - k \epsilon$ (the negative sign is there because the function pulls the ball down). We can conclude that $F(y) = -k y$, around the equilibrium.

We know that the force is proportional to accleration (at low speeds). Therefore, $m y'' = -k y$ and thus $y'' = -c y$. This means that any small motion around a stable equilibrium is approximately a sinusoid. Now a circular motion is just two oscillations (one on each axis).

This is all just a consequence of the fact that our universe seems to favor equations of the second degree, since the force is proportional to the acceleration (not to the velocity and not to the change of acceleration). Why is this the case? One can trace that to the action (Hamiltonian) of the physical system or even to the conservation laws (which follow from the invariants, for example, that the physics won't change if we shift everything up or down, or if we try the experiment at a later time). Still these are just features of our universe.


From a physical perspective, this comes from the prevalence of simple harmonic oscillators. A SHO is a system in which the force is linear in $\mathbf{x}$ and directed opposite to the displacement from equilibrium. If you put that into Newton's second law, you get

$$\mathbf{F}_\text{net} = -k\mathbf{x} = m\ddot{\mathbf{x}}$$

With a suitable change of variables, this is just your differential equation $y''=-y$.

It turns out that nearly every bounded system in physics can be modeled as a simple harmonic oscillator, at least as a leading approximation. This is related to the tendency of physical systems to seek out a stable equilibrium in some potential function $V(\mathbf{x})$. At a stable equilibrium position, the first derivative of $V(\mathbf{x})$ vanishes, and because only potential differences are physically meaningful, the actual value at equilibrium can be set to zero, so the leading nontrivial term in a Taylor series expansion of the potential is the quadratic term, $V(\mathbf{x}) \approx V''(\mathbf{x}_0)(\mathbf{x}-\mathbf{x}_0)^2$. And because $\mathbf{F}=-\nabla V$, this potential gives you the behavior of a SHO for small displacements.


I guess this is not quite the expected answer, but it's definitely something very special about sine.

"What makes sine so special?" It is simply the wisest and the most moderate real function that could possibly exist !

Theorem
Let $f : \Bbb R \to \Bbb R$ a function of class $\mathcal C^\infty$. Assume that :

  1. $f'(0) = 1$ ;
  2. for all non-negative integer $n$, the function $|f^{(n)}|$, the modulus of the $n$th derivative of $f$, is bounded by 1.

Then $f$ is the function sine. #

There are slightly stronger forms of this theorem, but I don't remember them... Everything is in the RMS, issue 116-3. Table of contents