Find the Limit of a Sequence Using L'Hospital Rule - Math Sequence Homework Help

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves finding the limit of a sequence defined by the expression a_{n}=n^{2}(1-cos\frac{4.2}{n}). The discussion centers around the application of L'Hospital's Rule due to the indeterminate form encountered as n approaches infinity.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the application of L'Hospital's Rule to resolve the indeterminate form of the limit. There are attempts to rewrite the sequence and apply the rule multiple times, with some questioning the correctness of their calculations and the interpretation of the limit.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants providing guidance on the application of L'Hospital's Rule and correcting each other's mistakes. There is a mix of confusion and clarification as participants navigate through the calculations and interpretations of the limit.

Contextual Notes

Some participants express uncertainty about the limit process for sequences and the implications of their calculations. There is acknowledgment of mistakes made in the calculations, which contributes to the exploratory nature of the discussion.

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Homework Statement


Find the limit of the sequence whose terms are given by [tex]a_{n}[/tex]=[tex]n^{2}[/tex](1-cos[tex]\frac{4.2}{n}[/tex])


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


I now that [tex]n^{2}[/tex] goes to infinity so have to use l'hospital rule because you will have infinity*0 which is an indeterminate form, so rewrote as
[tex]a_{n}[/tex]=[tex]\frac{(1-cos\frac{4.2}{n})}{\frac{1}{n^{2}}}[/tex]

[tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}[/tex] [tex]\frac{(1-cos\frac{4.2}{n})}{\frac{1}{n^{2}}}[/tex] [tex]\frac{}{}[/tex]
= [tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{[/tex] {[tex]\frac{-4.2sin\frac{4.2}{n}}{n^{2}}[/tex]}/{[tex]\frac{-2}{n^{3}}[/tex]}

won't the limit still be 0 i really don't understand any of this can anyone please help

 
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Ok, so l'Hopital gives you the form 8.4*n*sin(4.2/n), which is still 0*infinity. Just apply l'Hopital again like you did the first time.
 
okay so if i do it again i get
8.4 [tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}[/tex] [tex]\frac{sin\frac{4.2}{n}}{\frac{1}{n}}[/tex]
so in the end i will get
8.4 [tex]lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}[/tex](-4.2cos(4.2/x))

did i do it right so far
so is the answer -35.28 i really don't understand how you are suppose to find the limit can someone please help
 
Ooops. I made a mistake. Sorry! It's not 8.4*n*sin(4.2/n). It's -2.1*n*sin(4.2/n). Change the 8.4 to -2.1. There are three minuses and the 4.2 is divided by 2. Now it's easy. As n->infinity what does the cos approach. There's a good reason not to give to explicit hints - because I make too many mistakes.
 
so as n approaches infinity cos approaches 0 right
so do you just multiply -2.1 by -4.2 to get the answer
 
yeah i got the right answer thanks so much. but i still think that finding limits for sequences are still hard.
 
Some are, some aren't. Your's is kind of in the middle. Good job, though. Sorry to confuse you.
 

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