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Finding Limits at Infinity — Practice Questions

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2016-03-26 07:07:36
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At some point in your calculus life, you'll be asked to find a limit at infinity. Don't panic. Even when a limit expression looks tricky, you can use a number of techniques to change it so that you can plug in and solve it.

The following practice problems require you to use some of these techniques, including conjugate multiplication, FOILing, finding the least common denominator, simplifying, and canceling.

Practice questions

  1. Evaluate the following limit expression:

    image0.png
  2. Evaluate the following limit expression:

    image1.png

Answers and explanations

  1. The answer is

    image2.png

    So, how do you get this answer? First, put the entire expression over 1 so you can use the conjugate trick:

    image3.png

    Then FOIL the numerator:

    image4.png

    Now simplify the numerator and factor out 16x2 inside the radicand:

    image5.png

    Pull the 16x2 out of the square root; it becomes –4x.

    You have to pull a positive out of the radicand (as always), so you pull out negative 4x because when x is negative (which it is as it approaches negative infinity), –4x is positive. Got it?

    image6.png

    Now you can cancel and plug in:

    image7.png
  2. The answer is 6.

    To find the answer, you start by subtracting the fractions using the LCD of (x – 1)(x + 1) = x2 – 1. So:

    image8.png

    Now you simplify:

    image9.png

    Your answer is the quotient of the coefficients of x2 in the numerator and the denominator.

    Here's how that works: If the degrees of the two polynomials are equal, there's a horizontal asymptote at the number you get when you divide the coefficient of the highest power term in the numerator by the coefficient of the highest power term in the denominator. This number is the answer to the limit as x approaches infinity or negative infinity.

    In this case, the coefficients of x2 are 6 in the numerator and 1 in the denominator. So the quotient of the coefficients is

    image10.png

    Note that had you plugged in infinity in the original problem, you would have

    image11.png

    It may seem strange, but infinity minus infinity does not equal 0.

About This Article

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About the book author:

Mark Ryan has more than three decades’ experience as a calculus teacher and tutor. He has a gift for mathematics and a gift for explaining it in plain English. He tutors students in all junior high and high school math courses as well as math test prep, and he’s the founder of The Math Center on Chicago’s North Shore. Ryan is the author of Calculus For Dummies, Calculus Essentials For Dummies, Geometry For Dummies, and several other math books.