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Limits.
annalucky
post Mar 13 2006, 07:45 PM
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Okay. I need help. There's a quiz tomorrow, and I have no clue on what's going on. I'm sure most of you guys are pretty good in math.

For each of the following, find the limit as X approaches infinity.

a] a(x)=1000/x

b] b(x)=x^3-1000x^2

c] c(x)=(3x^2 + 7x)/(x^2 + 1000)


How do we find the limit without a calculator?

any one want to explain how limits work?

Tips and tricks would be nice too. _smile.gif
 
 
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*mipadi*
post Mar 13 2006, 11:19 PM
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Limits find a value that x approaches as x approaches a value. Basically, limits usually don't exist; their value is what x gets close to, but never quite reaches.

To analyze them, imagine what happens as x approaches the specified value—in this case, infinity. For example, your first function is a(x) = 1000/x. As x gets very large, what happens to 1000/x? It starts to get small, because a small number divided by a very large number is a tiny number. Furthermore, imagine x is infinity; anything divided by infinity is 0 (except for infinity divided by infinity), so lim(x -> infinity) of 1000/x is 0.

The others can be analyzed in the same way. In the second one, think about what happens as x approaches infinity. What is infinity cubed? What hapenes when you substract from that 1000 times infinity squared?

The same concept can, of course, be applied to the last one.
 

Posts in this topic
d4z3   Limits.   Mar 13 2006, 07:45 PM
RiC3xBoy   Just divide all values by the highest power of x a...   Mar 13 2006, 07:55 PM
d4z3   ^ would it be the same for negative infinity?   Mar 13 2006, 08:54 PM
RiC3xBoy   Dangit, I forgot sorry. I learned it first semeste...   Mar 13 2006, 09:22 PM
mipadi   Limits find a value that x approaches as x approac...   Mar 13 2006, 11:19 PM


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