Chap 3 Limit Nian

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The Limit Process

THE LIMIT PROCESS (AN INTUITIVE INTRODUCTION)


We could begin by saying that limits are important in
calculus, but that would be a major understatement.
Without limits, calculus would not exist. Every single
notion of calculus is a limit in one sense or another.
For example:

What is the slope of a curve? It is


the limit of slopes of secant lines.

What is the length of a curve? It is


the limit of the lengths of
polygonal paths inscribed in the
curve.
.
The Limit Process
What is the area of a region bounded by a curve? It is the
limit of the sum of areas of approximating rectangles.
• The Limit Value Does Not Depend on How the
Function Is Defined at 𝑥0
The Limit Process
The Idea of a Limit
We start with a number c and a function f defined at all
numbers x near c but not necessarily at c itself. In any
case, whether or not f is defined at c and, if so, how is
totally irrelevant.
Now let L be real number. We say that the limit of f (x)
as x tends to c is L and write
lim f  x   L
x c
provided that (roughly speaking)
as x approaches c, f(x) approaches L
or (somewhat more precisely) provided that
f (x) is close to L for all x ≠ c which are close to c.
The Limit Process

Example 1
Set f(x) = 4x + 5 and take c = 2. As x approaches 2, 4x
approaches 8 and 4x + 5 approaches 8 + 5 = 13. We
conclude that

lim f ( x)  lim 4 x  5  13.


x2 x2
The Limit Process
Example 2
Set f  x   1 x
and take c = −8.
As x approaches −8, 1 − x approaches 9 and 1 x
approaches 3. We conclude that lim f x
x 8
 3
If for that same function we try to calculate
lim f  x 
x 2

we run into a problem. The function f  x   1  x is


defined only for x ≤ 1. It is therefore not defined for x
near 2, and the idea of taking the limit as x approaches 2
makes no sense at all: lim f  x  does not exist.
x 2
The Limit Process
Example 3

x  2x  4 5
3
lim  .
x 3 x 1
2
2
First we work the numerator: as x approaches 3, x3
approaches 27, −2x approaches –6, and x3 – 2x + 4
approaches 27 – 6 + 4 = 25. Now for the denominator: as x
approaches 3, x2 + 1 approaches 10. The quotient (it would
seem) approaches 25/10 = 52.
Example 4
The Limit Process
x2  9
Set f  x  
x3
and let c = 3. Note that the function f is not defined at 3: at 3, both numerator and
denominator are 0. But that doesn’t matter. For x ≠ 3, and therefore for all x near 3,

x 2  9  x  3 x  3
  x3
x3 x3
x2  9
Therefore, if x is close to 3, then  x3
x 3
is close to 3 + 3 = 6. We conclude that
x2  9
lim  lim  x  3  6
x 3 x  3 x 3
The Limit Process

Example 6
3x – 4, x ≠ 0
If f(x) = then lim f(x) = –4.
10, x = 0, x→0

It does not matter that f(0) = 10. For x ≠ 0, and thus for all x near 0,
f(x) = 3x – 4 and therefore lim f(x) = lim (3x – 4) = –4.
x→0 x→0
Exercise
The Limit Process
One-Sided Limits
Numbers x near c fall into two natural categories:
those that lie to the left of c and those that lie to the
right of c.
We write lim f  x   L
x c
[The left-hand limit of f(x) as x tends to c is L.]
to indicate that
as x approaches c from the left, f(x) approaches L.
We write lim f  x   L
x c

[The right-hand limit of f(x) as x tends to c is L.]


to indicate that
as x approaches c from the right, f(x) approaches L
The Limit Process
Example
Take the function indicated in Figure 2.1.7. As x
approaches 5 from the left, f (x) approaches 2;
therefore lim f  x   2

x 5

As x approaches 5 from the right, f (x)


approaches 4; therefore lim f  x   4
x 5

The full limit, lim f  x  , does not exist: consideration of x <


x 5

5 would force the limit to be 2, but consideration of x > 5


would force the limit to be 4.

For a full limit to exist, both one-sided limits have to exist


and they have to be equal.
Example 7
The Limit Process
For the function f indicated in figure 2.1.8,

lim  f  x   5 and lim  f  x   5


x  2  x  2 

In this case
lim f  x   5
x 2

It does not matter that f (−2) = 3.

Examining the graph of f near x = 4, we find that

lim f  x   7 whereas lim f  x   2


x  4 x  4

Since these one-sided limits are different,

lim f  x  does not exist.


x 4
Example 8
The Limit Process
Set f ( x)  x / x. Note that f(x) = 1 for x > 0, and f(x) = −1 for x < 0:

1, if x > 0
f(x) =
−1, if x < 0.
Let’s try to apply the limit process at different numbers c.
If c < 0, then for all x sufficiently close to c,
x < 0 and f(x) = −1. It follows that for c < 0
lim f(x) = lim (−1) = −1
x→c x→c

If c > 0, then for all x sufficiently close to c, x > 0 and f(x) = 1. It follows that for
c<0
lim f(x) = lim (1) = 1
x→c x→c

However, the function has no limit as x tends to 0:


lim f(x) = −1 but lim f(x) = 1.
x→ 0- x → 0+
Example 9
The Limit Process
We refer to function indicated in Figure 2.1.10 and examine the behavior of
f(x) for x close to 3 and close to to 7.

As x approaches 3 from the left or from the right, f(x)


becomes arbitrarily large and cannot stay close to any
number L. Therefore

lim f(x) does not exist.


x→3

As x approaches 7 from the left, f(x) becomes arbitrarily large and cannot
stay close to any number L. Therefore

lim f(x) does not exist.


x→7

The same conclusion can be reached by noting as x approaches 7 from the


right, f(x) becomes arbitrarily large.
The Limit Process
Remark To indicate that f (x) becomes arbitrarily large, we can write
f (x)→∞. To indicate that f (x) becomes arbitrarily large negative, we
can write f (x)→−∞.

Consider Figure 2.1.10, and note that for the function depicted
there the following statements hold:
as x → 3¯, f (x) → (∞) and as x → 3 , f (x)→∞.
Consequently,
as x → 3, f (x)→∞.
Also, 

as x → 7¯, f (x)→−∞ and as x → 7 , f (x)→∞.


We can therefore write
as x → 7, | f (x)| → ∞.
The Limit Process
Example 10
We set 1
f(x) =
x–2

and examine the behavior of f(x) (a) as x tends to 4


and then (b) as x tends to 2.
For the function defined by setting

2 x  1, x  0
f  x   2
 x  x, x  0

Find lim f  x 
x 0
The Limit Process
Example 11

1 – x2, x < 1
Set f(x) =
1/(x – 1), x> 1.
The Limit Process
Example 12
Here we set f(x) = sin (π/ x) and show that the function can
have no limit as x → 0

The function is not defined at x = 0, as you know, that’s


irrelevant. What keeps f from having a limit as x → 0 is
indicated in Figure 2.1.13. As x → 0, f(x) keeps oscillating
between y = 1 and y = –1 and therefore cannot remain close
to any one number L.
The Limit Process
These calculations suggest that
sin x sin x
lim 1 and lim 1
x 0 x x 0 x

and therefore that


sin x
lim  1.
x 0 x

The graph of f, shown in Figure


2.1.14,
supports this conclusion. A
proof that this
limit is indeed 1 is given in
Section 2.5.
The Limit Process
Summary of Limits That Fail to Exist
We summarize the typical cases here:
(i) lim f  x   L1 , lim f  x   L2 and L1  L2
x c x c

(The left-hand and right-hand limits of f at c each exist,


but they are not equal.)
(ii) f(x) → +∞ as x → c–, or f(x) → +∞ as x → c+, or
both (Examples 9, 10, 11). (The function f is unbounded
as x approaches c from the left, or from the right, or both.)
(iii) f(x) “oscillates” as x → c–, c+ or c
Definition of Limit
Continuity
Continuity at a Point
The basic idea is as follows: We are given a function f and a
number c. We calculate (if we can) both lim f  x  and f (c). If
x c
these two numbers are equal, we say that f is continuous at c.
Here is the definition formally stated.
If the domain of f contains an interval (c − p, c + p), then f can
fail to be continuous at c for only one of two reasons: either
(i) f has a limit as x tends to c, but lim f  x   f  c  , or
x c

(ii) f has no limit as x tends to c.


Continuity

The functions shown have essential discontinuities at c.

The discontinuity in Figure 2.4.2 is, for obvious


reasons, called a jump discontinuity.

The functions of Figure 2.4.3 have infinite


discontinuities.
Continuity
Example 3
The function F ( x)  1 is continuous everywhere
5 x  16
2

except at x = ±3,
where it is not defined..
Continuity
Example 4
Determine the discontinuities, if any, of the following function:
2x + 1, x≦0
f(x) = 1, 0<x≦1 (Figure 2.4.8)

x2 + 1, x > 1.

Salas, Hille, Etgen Calculus: One and Several Variables


Copyright 2007 © John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Continuity

Example 5
Determine the discontinuities, if any, of the following function:

x3, x ≦ –1
x2 – 2, –1 < x < 1

f(x) = 6 – x, 1≦x<4
6 , 4<x<7
7–x
5x + 2, x ≧ 7.

Salas, Hille, Etgen Calculus: One and Several Variables


Copyright 2007 © John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
A function is continuous on an interval if and only if it is
continuous at every point of the interval.
For example:
The function
f  x   1  x2
is continuous on [−1, 1] because it is continuous at each point of
(−1, 1),
continuous from the right at −1, and continuous from the left
at 1.
Solution :
(b) The numerator is a rational power of the identity function;
the denominator is an everywhere-positive polynomial.
Therefore, the quotient is continuous.

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