Divergent limit + divergent limit = convergent limitIs it possible?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around evaluating limits in the context of the Method of Frobenius. Participants are examining specific limits as \( x \) approaches 0 and questioning the validity of a property of limits regarding the sum of functions.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants present several limits to evaluate, noting that two of them are divergent while the sum appears to be convergent. There is confusion regarding the implications of this observation on the property of limits.

Discussion Status

Some participants express uncertainty about the apparent contradiction in the behavior of divergent limits leading to a convergent result. Others clarify that the situation involves functions with divergent limits rather than summing two divergent limits directly. The discussion is ongoing with various interpretations being explored.

Contextual Notes

Participants are grappling with the conditions under which the property of limits holds true, specifically the requirement that individual limits must exist for the theorem to apply. There is an emphasis on ensuring that the assumptions made in the evaluation of limits are valid.

gikiian
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Homework Statement



As a part of Method of Frobenius, I am encountered with the following problems:

Evaluate the following limits:

Q1. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{1-2x}{x}

Q2. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{x-1}{x}

Q3. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{1-2x}{x}+\frac{x-1}{x}

In context of the above problems, I am having difficulty in verifying the following property of limits:

\stackrel{limit}{_{x→a}}(f(x)+g(x))=\stackrel{limit}{_{x→a}}f(x)+ \stackrel{limit}{_{x→a}}g(x)​

Homework Equations


N/A

The Attempt at a Solution



A1. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{1-2x}{x}=∞ (i.e. the limit is divergent)

A2. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{x-1}{x}=-∞ (i.e. the limit is divergent)

A3. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{1-2x}{x}+\frac{x-1}{x}=\frac{1-2x+x-1}{x}=\frac{-x}{x}=-1 (i.e. the limit is convergent)I am just confused by the apparent fact that sum of two divergent limits can be a convergent limit. Even though this is apparent in my problem, I still want to make sure if I am not messing up anywhere.
 
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gikiian said:

Homework Statement



As a part of Method of Frobenius, I am encountered with the following problems:

Evaluate the following limits:

Q1. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{1-2x}{x}

Q2. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{x-1}{x}

Q3. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{1-2x}{x}+\frac{x-1}{x}

In context of the above problems, I am having difficulty in verifying the following property of limits:

\stackrel{limit}{_{x→a}}(f(x)+g(x))=\stackrel{limit}{_{x→a}}f(x)+ \stackrel{limit}{_{x→a}}g(x)​


Homework Equations


N/A


The Attempt at a Solution



A1. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{1-2x}{x}=∞ (i.e. the limit is divergent)

A2. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{x-1}{x}=-∞ (i.e. the limit is divergent)

A3. \stackrel{limit}{_{x→0}}\frac{1-2x}{x}+\frac{x-1}{x}=\frac{1-2x+x-1}{x}=\frac{-x}{x}=-1 (i.e. the limit is convergent)


I am just confused by the apparent fact that sum of two divergent limits can be a convergent limit. Even though this is apparent in my problem, I still want to make sure if I am not messing up anywhere.

You cannot verify that "result" because it is just false, as your example shows. There is a somewhat similar true result, but it involves some extra hypotheses that your example fails to satisfy.
 
you're not summing two divergent limits. You're summing two functions whose individual limits at the same point are both divergent.
 
gikiian said:
In context of the above problems, I am having difficulty in verifying the following property of limits:

\stackrel{limit}{_{x→a}}(f(x)+g(x))=\stackrel{limit}{_{x→a}}f(x)+ \stackrel{limit}{_{x→a}}g(x)​

What the theorem states is that if both limits on the right side exist, then the limit on the left exists and equals the sum of the limits on the right. That's all.
 

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