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From the book A First Course in Probability 8th ed by Ross, expected value linearity is defined as $ E[aX + b] = aE[X] + b $ where a and b are both constants and X is a random variable.

However a random process defined $ X(t) = Kcos(wt) $ where K is a random variable has an expected value of $ E[X(t)] = E[K]cos(wt)$. My question is how is this true when cosine is a function of t and not a constant.

Thanks.

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    Yes, thank you, it was very imprecisely phrased.2012-12-08

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At this stage of your study, heuristically, you could consider constants everything that is not random. In the question, $X(t)=K \cos(w t)$ is a random function of $t$ only because $K$ is random. When you take the expectation, you could ignore everything that is not random. Were either $w$ or $t$ or both random, you would not be able to get $\cos( w t)$ outside of the expectation.

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    Yes. Remember that $Var(X)=E[X^2]-E[X]^2$. So the rules that apply to the expectation follow for the variance from that formula.2012-12-08