Series Expansion: Finding Limit x→0 of 1/(Sin^2(x))-1/x^2

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The forum discussion focuses on finding the limit as x approaches 0 of the expression 1/(sin²(x)) - 1/x² using series expansion techniques. Participants clarify that the series expansion for sin²(x) should include higher-order terms to accurately capture the behavior of the limit. The correct series expansion is sin²(x) = x² - (x⁴/3) + (x⁶/36), and the limit can be evaluated by factoring and applying the geometric series expansion. The final approach involves manipulating the expression to isolate the limit effectively.

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use series expansion to fine the limit as x--->0 of

1/(sin^2)(x) - 1/x^2






Sin^2(x)=(X-X^3/3!)^2 I've assumed this gave me
Sin^2(x)=X^2-2X^4/6+X^6/36
flip this over is that equivalent to 1/Sin^2(x)?
 
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It's not totally equivalent because you omitted higher order terms. Can you show you have enough terms to capture the behavior of 1/sin^2(x)-1/x^2 in the sense that terms that you omitted will go to zero as x->0?
 
Im sorry I am not quite sure what you mean by that?
 
I'm just saying sin(x) isn't equal to x-x^3/3!. You omitted the higher order terms, like x^5/5!. As you work out the limit you'll want to convince yourself that including them doesn't affect the limit as x->0. Do you know how to find the limit of 1/(x-x^3/3!)^2-1/x^2?
 
Actually no i dont, maybe you could explain to me how?
 
Factor the denominator of x-x^3/6 as x*(1-x^2/6). So you've got (1/x)*(1/(1-x^2/6)). Use that 1/(1-a)=1+a+a^2+a^3+... (the usual geometric series thing) to move the second factor into the numerator.
Now you've got (1/x)^2*(1+x^2/6+...)^2-1/x^2. Expand it. Now go back and figure out why I didn't need to keep any higher powers of x than I did.
 

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