L Hopital Rule
L Hopital Rule
LHopitals Rule
L'Hopitals Rule
Using L'Hopital's Rule allows us to evaluate the limit of a term or an indeterminate function, e.g. , goes to 0/0. For example, we take the limit sin 6x lim . sin x x0
(1)
Both the numerator and denominator tend to zero, so we can't tell if the limit equals zero, infinity, or something in between. By L'Hopital's Rule, we take the limit of the derivatives of top and bottom. This yields 6 cos 6x lim cos x x0 Or, take the case e lim x = . x This would become e lim 1 x
x x
= 6.
(2)
(3)
= ex = .
(4)
This second case is one where we would often use an informal, intuitive application of LHopitals Rule. Looking at it, we know that ex goes to infinity much faster than x . In other words, were estimating the slopes mentally instead of formally taking the derivatives. By the time x tends to infinity, the numerator is infinitely larger than the denominator; therefore, the limit = infinity.
LHopitals Rule
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Types of Indeterminate Forms Listed below are the different types of indeterminate forms, which require different tricks to be able to apply L'Hopital's Rule. These should be kept in mind, because it's easy to assume, for example, that something of the form
= zero.
indeterminate, you will most likely get the wrong answer. Table 1 Type of Indeterminate Form: 0 , 0
Example: x lim 2 x0 x
Method: Take derivative of numerator and denominator. 0 or . 0 I.e., make f(x) g(x) into f(x) . 1 g(x) Make into type Take logarithm of expression. I.e., ln[f(x)g(x) ] = g(x) [ln f(x)] This is now type (0) (). Fiddle with it algebraically to make it one of the above three types.
(0) ()
lim x ln x x
00 , 1 , 0
lim xx x0
1 1 lim x - 3 x x
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LHopitals Rule
= lim x 4
= lim x 4
- sin 4x x 4 (5)
lim -4 cos 4x x 4 4.
L'Hopital's Rule was applied three times before the limit was not of the form 0/0. References: Shenk, Calculus and Analytic Geometry Stephenson, Worked Examples in Mathematics for Scientists and Engineers