snoopies622
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A quiz at the end of Steven Krantz's Calculus Demystified includes the following problem:
Find
<br /> \lim_{x \to \infty} [ \sqrt[3]{x+1}<br /> -<br /> \sqrt[3]{x} ]<br />
I see how one can use the Maclaurin series to get
<br /> \sqrt[3]{x+1} = 1 + \frac {x}{3} - \frac {x^2}{9} + \frac {5 x^3}{81} + . . .<br />
but trying it with the cube root of x gives me zero plus an endless series of undefined terms.
Is there a way to expand \sqrt[3]{x} and solve this problem?
Find
<br /> \lim_{x \to \infty} [ \sqrt[3]{x+1}<br /> -<br /> \sqrt[3]{x} ]<br />
I see how one can use the Maclaurin series to get
<br /> \sqrt[3]{x+1} = 1 + \frac {x}{3} - \frac {x^2}{9} + \frac {5 x^3}{81} + . . .<br />
but trying it with the cube root of x gives me zero plus an endless series of undefined terms.
Is there a way to expand \sqrt[3]{x} and solve this problem?