0% found this document useful (0 votes)
134 views2 pages

Limits Functions Notes PDF

This document discusses examples of limits that do not exist. It provides four examples: 1) The limit of 1/(x-3) as x approaches 3 diverges to infinity since the denominator approaches 0. 2) The limit of 1/(x-3) as x approaches 3 diverges to both positive and negative infinity since the denominator changes signs. 3) The limit of a piecewise defined function f(x) does not exist at x=3 since the left and right limits are different values. 4) The limit of sin(1/x) as x approaches 0 does not exist since the function oscillates between -1 and 1 infinitely many times.

Uploaded by

Yiwen Liu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
134 views2 pages

Limits Functions Notes PDF

This document discusses examples of limits that do not exist. It provides four examples: 1) The limit of 1/(x-3) as x approaches 3 diverges to infinity since the denominator approaches 0. 2) The limit of 1/(x-3) as x approaches 3 diverges to both positive and negative infinity since the denominator changes signs. 3) The limit of a piecewise defined function f(x) does not exist at x=3 since the left and right limits are different values. 4) The limit of sin(1/x) as x approaches 0 does not exist since the function oscillates between -1 and 1 infinitely many times.

Uploaded by

Yiwen Liu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

Failures to have limits

Math 120 Calculus I


D Joyce, Fall 2013
Were primarily interested in limits that finding limits that exist. After all, every derivative
is a limit. But to understand a concept in mathematics, its important to know its boundaries,
and for this concept, its important to know some examples of limits that dont exist. That
is, as x approaches a, f (x) does not approach anything. When that happens, well say that
the lim f (x) does not exist.
xa
One imporant way that limits dont exist is that they go off to infinity. For example,
1
. As when x is close to 3, either slightly greater than 3 or slightly less than 3,
lim
x3 (x 3)2
the denominator (x 3)2 is a very small positive number, so its reciprocal is a very large
1
= and say that the limit diverges to . You
positive number. Well write lim
x3 (x 3)2
can see thats what happens since the graph y = f (x) is asymptotic to the vertical line x = 3
getting closer nearer the top of the line.
1
. When x is slightly greater than 3, the denominator x 3
A similar example is lim
x3 x 3
is a very small positive number, so its reciprocal is a very large positive number. But when
x is slightly less than 3, the denominator x 3 is slightly less than 0, so its reciprocal is near
1
. Well write lim
= and say that the limit diverges to . The graph of this
x3 x 3
function is also asymptotic to the vertical line x = 3, but this time on the left its near the
bottom of the line but on the right its near the top of the line.
Some times theres a jump at x = a. That doesnt happen when the function is given by
a single expression, but it can happen when the function is defined by cases. For example, if
we define f by
 2
if x < 3
x
f (x) =
2x if x 3
then there is a jump in the graph y = f (x) at x = 3. As x approaches 3 from the left,
f (x) = x2 approaches 9. But as x approaches 3 from the right, f (x) = 2x approaches 6. We
can say the left limit is 9 while the right limit is 6. Since the number you get depends
on the direction youre approaching 3, the limit doesnt exist.
There are other ways that the limit might not exist. Consider the function f (x) = sin x1 .
The limit lim sin x1 does not exist. Imagine what happens as you let x approach 0 from
x0

the right. Its reciprocal 1/x approaches +. As that happens the sine of it goes through
infinitly many cycles, 0 to 1 to 0 to 1 to 0. That means y = sin x1 oscillates between 1 and
1 infinitely many times; it is not approaching any particular number.

Math 120 Home Page at


http://math.clarku.edu/~djoyce/ma120/

You might also like