Limit of ln as x goes to infinity

Cacophony
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Homework Statement


lim (lnx)^2/x
x-->infinity


Homework Equations



none

The Attempt at a Solution



=5lnx/x * (1/lnx)/(1/lnx)

=5/(x/lnx)

How do I calculate x/lnx?
 
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Cacophony said:

The Attempt at a Solution



=5lnx/x * (1/lnx)/(1/lnx)

=5/(x/lnx)

How do I calculate x/lnx?

I do not follow you. What have you done?

ehild
 
Cacophony said:

Homework Statement


lim (lnx)^2/x
x-->infinity


Homework Equations



none

The Attempt at a Solution



=5lnx/x * (1/lnx)/(1/lnx)
Where did the 5 come from? In fact, where did any of this come from? What you have makes zero sense to me.

Also, since you haven't taken the limit yet, you should not get rid of the "lim" symbol.
Cacophony said:
=5/(x/lnx)

How do I calculate x/lnx?

This is a problem that is suited to L'Hopital's Rule. Have you covered it yet?
 
Cacophony said:

Homework Statement


lim (lnx)^2/x
x-->infinity

Cacophony,

what you typed is equivalent to:

\displaystyle \lim_{x\to \infty}\dfrac{[ln(x)]^2}{x}



Did you intend

\displaystyle \lim_{x\to \infty}[ln(x)]^{\frac{2}{x}} \ ?
 
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