Limit of Absolute Sequence: Is the Sandwich Theorem Applicable?

ohreally1234
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Homework Statement


Consider the sequence a_n = abs(sin(x))^(1/x)
Find the lim a_n if it exists

Homework Equations



None. This is for my calc 2 class.

The Attempt at a Solution



We are studying the sandwich theorem, so I thought 0 < M^(1/x) < abs(sin(x))^(1/x) < 1^(1/x).
(Because I assumed that sequences imply x = 1, 2, 3, 4 ..., so sin(x) never equals 0).

Since M^(1/x) and 1 both tend to 1, I reasoned a_n must go to 1.
 
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Do you mean a_{n}=|sin(n)|^{\frac{1}{n}}? Second, \sqrt[x]{1} does not tend to 0 as x becomes large, nor does even \sqrt[x]{\frac{1}{2}}. That doesn't make using 1 any less valid, you just made an incorrect assumption.
 
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sorry i meant that lim goes to 1. (fixed the typo in original post)
 
You're almost there, but I'm not convinced. Can you prove the existence of an M and that \sqrt[x]{M} goes to 1 as x becomes large? I'm not sure how much rigor is required in your class.
 
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I reasoned that M exists because the real numbers are dense.
and you can prove M^(1/x) goes to 1 using the definition of the limit.
Are there any holes in my argument?
 
ohreally1234 said:
(Because I assumed that sequences imply x = 1, 2, 3, 4 ..., so sin(x) never equals 0).

Well, it won't equal *exactly* 0, but doesn't the density of the reals imply that it gets arbitrarily close? What is \liminf_{n\to\infty}\left|\sin(n)\right|?
 
hmm yeah i thought that part of my argument was a bit shady.
can anyone offer some insights?
 
ohreally1234 said:
I reasoned that M exists because the real numbers are dense.
The real numbers are dense in what?

and you can prove M^(1/x) goes to 1 using the definition of the limit.
Are there any holes in my argument?
 
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