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MontyCarloHall 5 days ago

>They're eigenfunctions of linear time-invariant systems

For someone reading this with only a calculus background, an example of this is that you get back a sine (times a constant) if you differentiate it twice, i.e. d^2/dt^2 sin(nt) = -n^2 sin(nt). Put technically, sines/cosines are eigenfunctions of the second derivative operator. This turns out to be really convenient for a lot of physical problems (e.g. wave/diffusion equations).