dcowboys107 Posted August 21, 2010 Posted August 21, 2010 I have some limit problems and I'm not sure how to do it. I already have the answers so I'm not asking for answers but the "how to". lim (1/x)-(1/3) ----------- x--->3 (x-3) lim (t+4)^(1/2)-2 t-->0 ----------- t I always end up getting 0/0 on all the fractions. I'm not sure what to do for these. Thanks!
DJBruce Posted August 21, 2010 Posted August 21, 2010 [math]\frac{0}{0}[/math] is an indeterminate form, which allows you to L'Hopital. So I would suggest you try and apply L'Hopital to these.
dcowboys107 Posted August 21, 2010 Author Posted August 21, 2010 [math]\frac{0}{0}[/math] is an indeterminate form, which allows you to L'Hopital. So I would suggest you try and apply L'Hopital to these. I don't think we used L'Hopital or something. Is their a different way?
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted August 21, 2010 Posted August 21, 2010 Okay, just to be clear before I try to help: are these your problems? [math]\lim_{x \to 3} \frac{(1/x) - (1/3)}{x-3}[/math] [math]\lim_{t \to 0} \frac{(t+4)^{\frac{1}{2}} -2}{t}[/math] Sometimes it's hard to tell with equations written in text. You can click on the above formulas to see how I wrote them.
dcowboys107 Posted August 21, 2010 Author Posted August 21, 2010 You have it right. Thans for the info!
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted August 21, 2010 Posted August 21, 2010 Well, here's how I'd approach the first one if L'Hopital isn't an option. [math]\lim_{x \to 3} \frac{(1/x) - (1/3)}{x-3} = \lim_{x \to 3}\left( \frac{(1/x)}{x-3} - \frac{(1/3)}{x-3}\right) = \lim_{x \to 3} \left( \frac{1}{x(x-3)} - \frac{1}{3x - 9}\right)[/math] Once you simplify the fractions like that, you can tackle them much more easily.
DJBruce Posted August 21, 2010 Posted August 21, 2010 For the second since L'Hopital is not an option try rationalizing the nuemerator; like this: [math]\frac{(t+4)^{\frac{1}{2}} -2}{t} = \frac{\left(\sqrt{(t+4)} -2\right)\left(\sqrt{(t+4)} +2\right)}{t\left(\sqrt{(t+4)} +2\right)} [/math] [math]\frac{\left(\sqrt{(t+4)} -2\right)\left(\sqrt{(t+4)} +2\right)}{t\left(\sqrt{(t+4)} +2\right)}=\frac{\left(t+4-4\right)}{t\left(\sqrt{t+4} +2\right)}[/math] [math]\frac{\left(t+4-4\right)}{t\left(\sqrt{t+4} +2\right)}=\frac{1}{\sqrt{t+4}+2}[/math] So now we can evaluate the limit and it should be fairly obvious: [math]\lim_{t \to 0} \frac{1}{\sqrt{t+4}+2}=???[/math]
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