Limit of trigonometric function

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SUMMARY

The limit of the function y = (-2x)/(sinx) as x approaches 0 is -2, which can be established using various methods. While L'Hôpital's Theorem provides a straightforward solution, alternative approaches include expanding sin(x) using Taylor series or applying the squeeze theorem with the inequality cos(x) ≤ sin(x)/x ≤ 1. The discussion emphasizes the importance of recognizing that lim x → 0 (sin(x)/x) = 1 as a foundational concept for solving the limit problem without L'Hôpital's rule.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of limits in calculus
  • Familiarity with L'Hôpital's Theorem
  • Knowledge of Taylor series expansions
  • Concept of the squeeze theorem
NEXT STEPS
  • Study Taylor series expansions, particularly for sin(x)
  • Learn about the squeeze theorem and its applications in calculus
  • Explore alternative limit evaluation techniques beyond L'Hôpital's Theorem
  • Review geometric interpretations of trigonometric limits
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Students of calculus, mathematics educators, and anyone seeking to deepen their understanding of limit evaluation techniques in trigonometric functions.

needingtoknow
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Homework Statement



lim x --> 0 for function y = (-2x)/(sinx)

Using L'Hopital's Theorem, I found the derivative of the top and of the bottom and found the limit and got -2. How to find the limit as x approaches 0 without using L'Hopital's theorem. I know my solutions manual uses a different method, but I don't know what it is because they have skipped all those steps.
 
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needingtoknow said:

Homework Statement



lim x --> 0 for function y = (-2x)/(sinx)

Using L'Hopital's Theorem, I found the derivative of the top and of the bottom and found the limit and got -2. How to find the limit as x approaches 0 without using L'Hopital's theorem. I know my solutions manual uses a different method, but I don't know what it is because they have skipped all those steps.
If they skipped all the steps, how do you know that they did it differently from you? Is it possible that they expanded the denominator in a Taylor series about x = 0?

Chet
 
No matter how you solve this problem, you will effectively need to establish that
$$\lim_{x \rightarrow 0}\frac{\sin(x)}{x} = 1$$
There are many ways to do this, L'Hospital's rule being the simplest but not the most elementary.

If you know about Taylor series, then you can expand ##\sin(x)##, divide each term by ##x##, and take the limit. All terms except the first will go to zero.

There's also nice proof which uses a geometric (not 100% rigorous, but very intuitively convincing) argument to establish the following inequality, which is valid for all nonzero ##x \in [-\pi/2, \pi/2]##:
$$\cos(x) \leq \frac{\sin(x)}{x} \leq 1$$
The result then follows from the squeeze theorem. See the first answer at this StackExchange link to see the picture from which the inequality is inferred:

http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/75130/how-to-prove-that-lim-limits-x-to0-frac-sin-xx-1
 
The simplest way (the first week of Calc 1) to solve this problem is to note that (-2x)/sin(x) =-2/(sin(x)/x) then solve the problem using standard limit rules.
 
Thank you all for posting. I ended up using shortbus_bully's method because he was right it was the simplest way to solve the problem!
 

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