MTH4100 Calculus I: Lecture Notes For Week 4 Thomas' Calculus, Sections 2.4 To 2.6
MTH4100 Calculus I: Lecture Notes For Week 4 Thomas' Calculus, Sections 2.4 To 2.6
MTH4100 Calculus I: Lecture Notes For Week 4 Thomas' Calculus, Sections 2.4 To 2.6
Rainer Klages
Autumn 2009
One-sided limits and limits at infinity
To have a limit L as x → c, a function f must be defined on both sides of c (two-sided
limit). If f fails to have a limit as x → c, it may still have a one-sided limit if the
approach is only from the right (right-hand limit) or from the left (left-hand limit).
example:
• limx→0+ f (x) = 1
• limx→0− f (x) = −1
• limx→0 f (x) does not exist
Limit laws and theorems for limits of polynomials and rational functions all hold for one-
sided limits.
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example:
sin θ
Limits involving :
θ
Theorem 1
sin θ
lim
= 1 (θ in radians)
θ θ→0
Proof: Show equality of left-hand and right-hand limits at x = 0 by using the ‘Sandwich
Theorem’ (Thomas’ Calculus p.105ff).
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example:
Compute
cos h − 1
lim = [sin2 (h/2) = (1 − cos h)/2]
h→0 h
−2 sin2 (h/2)
= lim
h→0 h
sin(h/2)
= lim − sin(h/2) [θ = h/2]
h→0 h/2
sin θ
= lim − sin θ [limit laws]
θ→0 θ
= −1 · 0 = 0
Special case of a limit:
x approaching positive/negative infinity
example:
Definition 1 (informal) 1. We say that f (x) has the limit L as x approaches infinity
and write
lim f (x) = L
x→∞
if, as x moves increasingly far from the origin in the positive direction, f (x) gets arbitrarily
close to L.
2. We say that f (x) has the limit L as x approaches minus infinity and write
lim f (x) = L
x→−∞
if, as x moves increasingly far from the origin in the negative direction, f (x) gets arbitrarily
close to L.
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examples:
1
lim k = k and lim
=0
x→±∞ x→±∞ x
Theorem 2 (Limit laws as x approaches infinity) If L, M and k are real numbers and
limx→±∞ f (x) = L and limx→±∞ g(x) = M, then
example:
1
lim 5 + = [sum rule]
x→∞ x
1
= lim 5 + lim [known results]
x→∞ x→∞ x
= 5
example:
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1 1
lim= 0 and lim =0
x→∞ x x→−∞ x
The graph approaches the line y = 0 asymptotically: The line is an asymptote of the
graph.
example:
Calculate the horizontal asymptote for rationals: pull out the highest power of x.
The graph has the line y = 5/3 as a horizontal asymptote on both the left and the right,
because
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lim f (x) = .
x→±∞ 3
What happens if the degree of the polynomial in the numerator is one greater than that in
the denominator? Do polynomial division:
example:
2x2 − 3 2 8 115
f (x) = = x− −
7x + 4 7 49 49(7x + 4)
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with
−115
lim =0
x→±∞ 49(7x + 4)
If for a rational function f (x) = p(x)/q(x) the degree of p(x) is one greater than the degree
of q(x), polynomial division gives
f (x) = ax + b + r(x) with lim r(x) = 0
x→±∞
example:
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1
f (x) = has no limit as x → 0+ . However, it is convenient to still say that f (x) approaches
x +
∞ as x → 0 . We write
1
lim+ = ∞
x→0 x
Similarly,
1
lim− = −∞
x→0 x
1
note: lim+ = ∞ really means that the limit does not exist, because 1/x becomes
x→0 x
arbitrarily large and positive as x → 0+ !
1
lim =∞
x→0 x2
if, as x → x0 , the values of f grow without bound, eventually reaching and surpassing every
positive real number.
Vertical asymptotes
example:
Recall that limx→0+ x1 = ∞ and limx→0− x1 = −∞. This means that the graph approaches
the line x = 0 asymptotically: The line is an asymptote of the graph.
The graph approaches the x-axis from only one side: Asymptotes do not have to be two-
sided!
x2 − 3
f (x) =
2x − 4
• Rewrite by polynomial division:
x 1
f (x) = +1+
2 2x − 4
.
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x
• Asymptotes are y = 2
+1, x=2.
We say that x/2 + 1 dominates when x is large and that 1/(2x − 4) dominates when x
is near 2.
Continuity
Definition 3 (informal) Any function whose graph can be sketched over its domain in one
continuous motion, i.e. without lifting the pen, is an example of a continuous function.
example:
example:
1. f (c) exists.
example:
1
• y= x
is a continuous function: It is continuous at every point of its domain.
• It has nevertheless a discontinuity at x = 0: No contradiction, because it is not
defined there.
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example: f (x) = x and constant functions are continuous ⇒ polynomials and rational
functions are also continuous
x sin x
example: Show that y = 2
is everywhere continuous.
x + 2
x sin x
• f (x) = is continuous (why?).
x2 + 2
• Therefore y = g ◦ f is continuous.
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