l'Hôpital's Rule is used to make sense out of limits that are indeterminate, that is, limits that you can't figure out by just plugging in the limiting value of x into the expression. We have seen many such limits, usually of the form
where both
A limit is indeterminate if it is one of the following forms (that is, the pieces of the expression have the indicated limits themselves):
By some standard algebraic tricks, any of the other forms can be reduced to one of the first two (though the last two should be kept separate).
Here is what l'Hôpital paid for:
Theorem 1 Let f and g be differentiable on some interval, with a in that interval, and assume they satisfy
Remark 1 a could be a number, or it could be ¥. The theorem also holds for one-sided limits, like lim x® a+ f(x)g(x) , as well.
Example 1
Exercise 2 lim x® 0 cos(x)-1x2 =
Here, once you apply l'Hôpital's rule, you will still be left with an indeterminate limit. Apply l'Hôpital's rule again. You can continue to do this until you come to a fraction you can simplify, or until the limit is no longer an indeterminate form.
There is a separate l'Hôpital's rule theorem for for ¥/¥ -type limits,
Theorem 2 [l'Hôpital's Rule, ¥/¥ form] Let f and g be differentiable on some interval, with a in that interval, and assume they satisfy
Example 2
For functions that go to infinity as x® ¥, we can use l'Hôpital's rule to compare how quickly they go to infinity. We say that f << g (or, g >> f ) if
As an example, since
Exercise 4 Place the following functions in order from the slowest growth rate to the fastest, as x® ¥.
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Copyright 2000 David L. Johnson