Finding Limits: (x-sin(x))/x Problem and Solutions

  • Thread starter Thread starter moo5003
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Limit
Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around finding the limit of the expression (x - sin(x))/x as x approaches infinity. Participants are exploring the behavior of this limit and questioning the correctness of the answer provided in a textbook.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Some participants attempt to apply L'Hôpital's Rule and discuss the conditions under which it is valid, questioning whether the limit results in an indeterminate form.
  • Others explore alternative approaches to the limit, including rewriting the expression and considering the behavior of sin(x) as x approaches infinity.
  • There are discussions about the implications of oscillating functions like cos(x) and sin(x) in the context of limits.
  • Participants express confusion regarding the textbook's answer and suggest that it may be incorrect based on their calculations and interpretations.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with various interpretations being explored. Some participants have provided guidance on applying L'Hôpital's Rule, while others are questioning the assumptions made in the problem setup. There is no explicit consensus on the correct limit, and multiple lines of reasoning are being examined.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that the problem involves limits as x approaches infinity, which influences the applicability of certain mathematical rules and the interpretation of the limit's behavior. There is also mention of potential typographical errors in the textbook regarding the limit's context.

moo5003
Messages
202
Reaction score
0
Problem: Find the following limits if they exist.

a) lim x->Infinity (x-sin(x))/x

Work done so far: g(x) = x which goes to infinty as x goes to infinity, thus applying L'Hospitals Rule the limit must equal:

1-cos(x) / 1 = 1-cos(x) as x approaches infinity.

Obviously... cos(x) oscillates from 1 to -1... not giving us a real limit.

Alternative:
(x-sin(x))/x = 1 - sin(x)/x = 1 - (1/x)sin(x) as X approaches infinity this limit becomes 1 - 0 = 1.

My problem is that the back of the book tells me the answer is 0... I have no clue how they got this and I was wondering if anyone could give me a push in the right direction.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Be careful when you're applying L'hopital's rule. i.e. is (x - sinx) / x of the 0 over 0 type? Infinity over infinity type?

ie, what is the limit of (2x+3)/(x-4) when x approaches 5?
The limit would be 13/1 = 13. Applying L'Hopital's rule, when it shouldn't be applied, would result in 2/1 = 2 (which is incorrect) for this problem.

Also, the limit of sin(x) / x is not equal to 0. And, you can apply L'hopital's rule to this one (or the limit should have been proven earlier in your text by using the squeezing theorem.)
 
Last edited:
How can I apply l'hospital's rule effectively as x approaches infinity for sin(x)/x seems to be my main concern.

sin(x)/x (Allowed to use since x-> Inf.)

Thus the limit is equal to cos(x) as x approaches infinity. But cos(x) has no limit as x approaches infinity.
 
I'm starting the believe the book is just wrong in this case... When I graph (x-sin(x))/x it leads me to believe the limit approaches 1 as x goes to infinity as I keep coming up with.

Proof:

(x-sin(x))/x = 1-sin(x)/x = 1-(1/x)sin(x)

Lim as x-> Infinity = 1 - 0 * sin(x) = 1-0*[-1,1] (range of sin), though since its times 0 it doesn't really matter... thus = 1 - 0 = 1.
 
Sorry, had a brain fart... was thinking the limit as x approaches 0.
 
The limit of sinx / x as x approaches infinity isn't one of the indeterminant cases though; it's not 0 over 0, nor is it the type infinity over infinity. The value of that part of the limit is zero.

Thus, your fraction is equal to x/x - (sinx)/x. The first part is 1, the second part is 0, the value of the limit is 1, as you originally stated in your alternative method (which I believe is correct.)edit edit: all is well in my head again... Your original alternate version is correct. Since you can easily re-write the function such that it isn't an infinity over infinity type, you don't apply L'Hopital's rule.
 
Last edited:
What did you make the original function into? I would like to see a more direct proof as I'm not totally sure how rigorous it is to say that 0* anything in the range is 0 for the proof.
 
x-\sin(x)
goes to 0 as x goes to 0.
as does x, so it's a \frac{0}{0}.

Now, taking the derivative of the top and bottom, the answer should be pretty clear.

...

Dr. Pizza:
Please be careful when answering people:
\lim_{x \rightarrow 0} \frac{\sin(x)}{x}=1
 
always use l'hopital on these questions. (due of course to bernoulli)
 
  • #10
NateTG said:
x-\sin(x)
goes to 0 as x goes to 0.
as does x, so it's a \frac{0}{0}.

Now, taking the derivative of the top and bottom, the answer should be pretty clear.

...

Dr. Pizza:
Please be careful when answering people:
\lim_{x \rightarrow 0} \frac{\sin(x)}{x}=1

x isn't going to 0. The problem says x goes to infinity

Edit: Dont be mean to Pizza, he made the same assumption as you which I believe the book typoed on this problem. I would assume the book meant to put as x approaches zero as that would make the most sense for the problem (at least when the chapter is proving L'H rule). Though, as it stands the problem has approaching infinity, which allows you to use L'H rule... though the derivative has no clear limit L.
 
Last edited:
  • #11
Lot's of cranial methane here...

Ah, so it should be infinity - if you don't want to deal with the derivative, you can still squeeze the limit.
\frac{x-1}{x}\leq \frac{x-\sin(x)}{x} \leq \frac{x+1}{x}
Now, you have two expressions (on the outside) that are easy to apply l'Hopital's rule to.
 

Similar threads

Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
3K
Replies
4
Views
4K
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 8 ·
Replies
8
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 13 ·
Replies
13
Views
3K