limits to infinity (1 Viewer)

tommykins

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if you split the fractoins, you get

9/3x + x^2/3x = 3/x + x/3 so as x ->infinity 3/x -> 0 and x/3 -> infinity
 

copeys

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I was always told to "divide by the highest power of x, if that fails, divide by the next highest"

I divided by the highest power of x and got like 1/0 which doesn't work.

I then divided by x:



Cancelling down, then substituting x=infinity in, I got:



Which cancels down to:



Is that right?
 

cutemouse

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If the limit is infinity then no limit exists.
 

Trebla

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You can sorta tell intuitively that the limit will not exist because the squared term in the numerator magnifies x much more than the x in the denominator as x gets large, so the dominating effect is that the numerator becomes large, hence the expression blows up to infinity...
 

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