Chapters
Applications of Limits
Remember in the beginning, we said that when we get to derivatives, we'll be doing limits all the time? Now is the time to learn some useful limits that you are going to rely heavily on in the future. The first one of these is
The solution to this limit is not immediately obvious, so we are going to take a detour and review something that you (should have) learned in Precalculus.
In the graph above, we have 3 values :
If you don't immediately have an answer, think for a few minutes about how we could order these three values in an inequality. One possible (wrong) answer is
Once you think you have an answer, continue on.
Looking at the graph tells us that
Now, we can use this property to evaluate our limit! Dividing by gives
Oops! We have our value, but it's upside down! Let's plug in to this anyways, and see what we can do. Well, we can just take the reciprocal of all of them and we'll be good to go, right?? No [Why not?]. However, we can take the reciprocal, and then reverse the signs. So now, we have
We know for a fact that
So, now we say for sure that
This is pretty redundant, and implies that
Yes, really - it's just 1. Now, try a two-step limit. Don't forget to use what you just learned! 2.
This is one example of how the limit we just learned can sneak up on you! Here's how we transform it into two problems we can solve:
One times one is... one? Yep.