How can I solve limx->infinity (x/x+1)^x using L'Hospital's rule?

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l'hospitals rulee! major help

1. i don't know how to do this question
limx->infinity (x/x+1)^x. i keep gettin the rong answer, some heelp pleasez:confused:




2.the right answer is 1/e but I am not getting that, i tried many diff ways, i can't post my work it here because its too long and confusing



The Attempt at a Solution


 
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Hint

Consider the series expansion for e^[1/x], when x is large.
 
umm so when x is large 1/x = 0 so that means e^o = 1, I am still lossttt
 
Do you know the Taylor series for e^y, when y is small?
 
noo..havent learned it =S
 
i took the ln of both sides, and then found the derivative, and i got the answer as zero.. so i got ln y= 0
den i used the fact that e^lny = y...there fore y= e^0 =S..
 
Hmmm, I'm not sure how to do it without recourse to a Taylor series expansion. It's easy to prove though that

e^x=1+x+x^2/2!+x^3/3+...

Have you done Taylor series at all?
 
noo i haven't :|
 
kk thnnxx for your help newayzz =)
 
  • #10
You suggested that L'hopital's rule should be used in the derivation. I played around with that and couldn't see it, but maybe someone else can work it out.

Let me know when you get the answer.
 
  • #11
You should have gotten something like x*ln(x/(x+1)) when you took the log. This is an infinity*0 form. To use L'Hopital you want to write it as 0/0 (or infinity/infinity). So write it as ln(x/(x+1))/(1/x). Now take derivative of the numerator and denominator and send x->infinity.
 
  • #12
There's no need for l'Hospital's rule, as this limit is elementary

\lim_{x\rightarrow \infty}\left(1-\frac{1}{x+1}\right)^{(x+1)\frac{x}{x+1}} =e^{-\lim_{x\rightarrow \infty}\frac{x}{x+1}}=e^{-1}
 
  • #13
Dick, Brilliant!
 
  • #14
dextercioby said:
There's no need for l'Hospital's rule, as this limit is elementary

\lim_{x\rightarrow \infty}\left(1-\frac{1}{x+1}\right)^{(x+1)\frac{x}{x+1}} =e^{-\lim_{x\rightarrow \infty}\frac{x}{x+1}}=e^{-1}

That's supposing that you know the Taylor series expansion of e^x. It's nice that you can prove it a completely different way.
 
  • #15
christianjb said:
Dick, Brilliant!

Thanks. Wish I could say I invented it, but it's a pretty routine thing to do.
 
  • #16
christianjb said:
That's supposing that you know the Taylor series expansion of e^x. It's nice that you can prove it a completely different way.

Pardon me ? I just the definition of "e". What's more elementary than that ??:rolleyes:
 
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