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Objectives

Objectives. Informal definition of limits Limit laws Skip formal definition of limit (epsilon, delta) Basic computational tools. Future Applications. Limits in 3 basic calculus problems : Tangent line problem: Find tangent line to curve at given point Area problem: Find area under curve

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Objectives

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  1. Objectives • Informal definition of limits • Limit laws • Skip formal definition of limit (epsilon, delta) • Basic computational tools

  2. Future Applications • Limits in 3 basic calculus problems: • Tangent line problem: Find tangent line to curve at given point • Area problem: Find area under curve • Instantaneous velocity problem: If s=position=f(t), t=time, find instantaneous velocity at given time

  3. Rough definition • Write if f(x) can be made sufficiently close to L by making x sufficiently close (but not equal to) a • Think of always needing (x,f(x)) to be in narrow ribbon around y=L for x close to a (but not equal to a)

  4. Remarks • Important: For limit at x=a, value of f at a not relevant • E.g., If f(x) = 25 for x0 and f(0) = 347, then limit of f as x approaches 0 is 25 • Find

  5. Harder Examples • Compute the following limits:

  6. One-sided limits • Consider f(x)=x/|x|. Then f(x) tends to 1 as x tends to 0 from the right , and it tends to -1 as x tends to 0 from the left • This function has a jump at 0 so (two-sided) limit doesn’t exist even though both one-sided ones do

  7. Definition of one-sided limits • Definition of right, left limits similar to two-sided limit except only use values of f to one side of a • Remark: for (two-sided) limit to exist the two one-sided limits must exist and agree

  8. Left hand limit

  9. Limit does not exist: oscillation

  10. The limiting process is demonstrated by first displaying blue dots approaching c in the domain. These are connected to the functional values via dotted lines through the function's graph. The corresponding functional values are displayed as red dots on the vertical axis. As the blue dots converge on 0, the red dots converge on the limit. Convergent limit from both sides

  11. Infinite Limits • Infinite-valued limits (f blowing up):

  12. An infinite limit

  13. Examples Line x=a a vertical asymptote if each one-sided limit approachs 

  14. Limit laws • Suppose that a is a constant and that the limit of f and g at c exists. Then

  15. Polynomials and rational functions • limxcx = c. • limxcx2 = limxcx limxcx = c2 • More generally:

  16. Examples

  17. Root law

  18. Comparison Theorem

  19. Damped Oscillation

  20. Sandwich Theorem

  21. Related Examples • Compute the following limits

  22. Limits at infinity

  23. Damped Oscillation at infinity

  24. More Examples

  25. Limits of rational functions at infinity

  26. Examples

  27. Logistic Growth • Suppose N(t) population at time t. Under logistic growth model:

  28. Logistic Graph

  29. Example

  30. Exponential Population Growth • Unlimited population growth, similar to compound interest on bank account (or credit card account!) • Exponential population growth is only appropriate for describing the initial colonization of empty habitats.

  31. Exponential Growth Graph

  32. Exponential tidbit • If human population of earth were to increase at this rate indefinitely: • By A.D. 3530 the total mass of human flesh and blood would equal the mass of the earth • By A.D. 6826 the total mass of human flesh and blood would equal the mass of the known universe • Source: “All I really needed to know I learned in Kindergarten”, Robert Folghum, 1986

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