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MATH12002 - CALCULUS I §1.6: Limits at Infinity Professor Donald L. White Department of Mathematical Sciences Kent State University D.L. White (Kent State University) 1 / 13 Introduction to Limits at Infinity Our definition of lim f (x) = L required a and L to be real numbers. x→a In this section, we expand the definition to allow a to be infinite (limits at infinity) or L to be infinite (infinite limits). Wenowconsider limits at infinity. Afunction y = f(x) has limit L at infinity if the values of y become arbitrarily close to L when x becomes large enough. Our basic definition is: Definition Let y = f (x) be a function and let L be a number. The limit of f as x approaches +∞ is L if y can be made arbitrarily close to L by taking x large enough (and positive). Wewrite lim f(x) = L. x→+∞ Compare this to the definition of lim f (x) = L. x→a The definition means that the graph of f is very close to the horizontal line y = L for large values of x. D.L. White (Kent State University) 2 / 13 Introduction to Limits at Infinity Most of the functions we study that have finite limits at infinity are quotients of functions. To evaluate these limits at infinity, we will use the following idea. Basic Principle If c is a real number and r is any positive rational number, then lim c =0. x→+∞xr If c is a real number and r is any positive rational number such that xr is defined for x < 0, then c lim r = 0. x→−∞x This is used as in the following examples. D.L. White (Kent State University) 3 / 13 Examples Example Find 2x3 +5 lim 3 x→+∞7x +4x+3 if the limit exists. Before we solve this problem, notice that 2x3 + 5 and 7x3 + 4x + 3 both approach +∞ as x → +∞ and so 3 lim (2x3 +5) lim 2x +5 6= x→+∞ . x→+∞7x3+4x+3 lim (7x3 +4x +3) x→+∞ In order to evaluate the limit, we will first use an algebraic manipulation to turn this into an expression whose limit is the quotient of the limits of the numerator and denominator. Wewill then use the Basic Principle to evaluate these limits. D.L. White (Kent State University) 4 / 13
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