Rodrae said:
/x/ = y is non removable discontinuity
xbut is
/x/^2 = y is a removable discontinuity or not? and why?
x^2
You can tell from the graphs of these functions whether the discontinuity is removable or not.
|x|/x is discontinuous for sure at x = 0
For positive x the graph is the horizontal line y = 1
For negative x the graph is the horizontal line y = -1
This causes a 'jump' discontinuity at x = 0 the y value jumps from -1 to 1 at x = 0
'Jump' discontinuities are not removable because you can not make the graph continuous by filling in a SINGLE point where the problem occurs. In this case at x = 0
Infinite discontinuities are also non-removable, because you can not make the graph continuous by filling in a SINGLE point.
|x^2|/x^2 is discontinuous for sure at x = 0
however graph of |x^2| is exactly the same as graph of x^2 so absolute value symbol is un-necessary since extra branch is not introduced.
So considering values very close to 0, on the left of 0 |x^2|/x^2 gives 1, on the right of zero |x^2|/x^2 gives 1. This is not a 'jump' discontinuity (or an infinite discontinuity) and the function can be made continuous by filling in a SINGLE point.
So |x^2|/x^2 has a removable discontinuity at x= 0
The key is a discontinuity is removable if you can 'fix' discontinuity using a single point.
Heres a bonus question...1/|x| ... is the discontinuity at x= 0 removable or non removable and why?