MATH 116, LECTURE 22: L’Hopital’s Rule 1 L’Hopital’s Rule Another application of the derivative is in evaluating limits which have an indeterminate form. We saw several weeks ago that problems arise in evaluating rational functions for which the limit, if we were to treat it as a simple number, gives us one of the indeterminate forms “0” 0 or “∞” . ∞ We encountered some different techniques for resolving these types of limits, including factoring, rationalizing roots, dividing top and bottom by powers of x, and the squeeze theorem. How about the following limit? ln(x) . x→∞ x lim This is clearly an indeterminant form (∞/∞), but we cannot factor it, there are no roots to rationalize, dividing by x doesn’t resolve anything, and there is no clear candidate for an upper and lower bound on the term. The following result, however, comes to our aid. It is an application of the derivative, and is one of the most powerful tools for determining limits of the form above. Theorem 1.1 (L’Hopital’s Rule). Suppose that the functions f and g are differentiable at x = a and that the limit as t → a of f (x)/g(x) has one of the indeterminate forms “0/0” or “∞/∞”. Then we have f (x) f 0 (x) = lim 0 . x→a g(x) x→a g (x) lim In other words, we can evaluate indeterminate limits of the forms “0/0” and “∞/∞“ by taking the derivative of the top and bottom (separately!) and evaluating that limit instead. It is not immediately obvious that this 1 should help us, but consider the example. We have ln(x) x→∞ x lim “ ∞ ” ∞ 1 x (L’Hopital’s) 1 1 = lim = 0. x→∞ x There are a few notes worth making about the application of L’Hopital’s Rule. = lim x→∞ 1. The functions which we apply L’Hopital’s rule to are quotients, but we do not apply the quotient rule to the derivates! The derivatives on the top and bottom are evaluated separately. 2. Sometimes one application of L’Hopital’s rule will not be enough to resolve the indeterminacy in the limit. We may have to perform it multiple times (checking each time that the ratio has the proper form!). 3. L’Hopital’s rule only applies to indeterminate limits of the form “0/0” and “∞/∞”. There are, however, many other indeterminate limit forms. Many of them can be handled by simple manipulation: (a) lim f (x)g(x) = “0 · ∞” x→a — Take the reciprocal of f (x) (or g(x)) to get a rational function g(x) ∞ =“ ” lim 1 ∞ x→a f (x) or 0 f (x) = “ ”. lim 1 0 x→a g(x) Apply L’Hopital’s rule to this form. (b) lim f (x)g(x) = “1∞ ” x→a — Take the limit of the natural logarithm to get h i lim ln f (x)g(x) = lim [g(x) ln(f (x))] = “∞ · 0”. x→a x→a Then apply the previous rule and remember to take the exponent of the answer! (c) lim f (x)g(x) = “00 ” x→a — Again, take the limit of the natural logarithm to get h i lim ln f (x)g(x) = lim [g(x) ln(f (x))] = −“0 · ∞” x→a x→a then apply the first rule. 2 Example 1: Evaluate lim t→0 sin(t) t using L’Hopital’s rule. Solution: We already know that this limit evaluates to one by an application of the squeeze theorem. Let’s see if we can get the same result using L’Hopital’s rule. We have sin(t) t→0 t cos(t) = lim t→0 1 = 1. lim 0 “ ” 0 Example 2: Evaluate 2x2 − 5 x→∞ 3x2 + 7x + 15 lim using L’Hopital’s rule. Solution: We have 2x2 − 5 x→∞ 3x2 + 7x + 15 4x = lim x→0 6x + 7 4 = lim x→0 6 2 = . 3 lim Example 3: Evaluate sin(x) − x . x→0 x3 lim 3 ∞ ” ∞ ∞ “ ” ∞ “ Solution: We have sin(x) − x x→0 x3 cos(x) − 1 = lim x→0 3x2 − sin(x) = lim x→0 6x − cos(x) = lim x→0 6 1 =− . 6 Example 4: Evaluate 1 x lim 1 − . x→∞ x lim 0 “ ” 0 0 “ ” 0 0 “ ” 0 Solution: We have 1 x lim 1 − = “1∞ ”. x→∞ x We need to rearrange this to get it into a form “0/0” or “∞/∞”. To resolve the exponent, we take the natural logarithm of both sides to get 1 x 1 lim ln 1 − . = lim x ln 1 − x→∞ x→∞ x x This is a limit of the form ∞ · 0, so we divide by the reciprocal of one of the terms. We have ln 1 − x1 0 lim “ ” 1 x→∞ 0 x 1 1/ 1 − x1 2 x = lim x→∞ − x12 1 = − lim x→∞ 1 − 1 x = −1. We recall this is the limit of natural logarithm of the limit we want, so we really have 1 x 1 lim 1 − = e−1 = . x→∞ x e 4
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