Bennigan88
- 38
- 0
I am trying to prove that \lim\left[\sqrt{n^2+n}-n\right]=\frac{1}{2}
Where n \in \mathbb{N} and \lim is the limit of a sequence as n\to\infty.
From the definition of a limit, I know that I need to show that \exists{N}:n>N\Rightarrow\left|\sqrt{n^2+n}-n-\frac{1}{2}\right| < \epsilon
Through algebraic manipulation I was able to arrive at
\left| \sqrt{n^2+n} - n - \frac{1}{2} \right| = \left| \frac{n-\sqrt{n^2+n}}{n+ \sqrt{n^2+n}} \right|
Which now means that I must show that
\exists N : n>N \Rightarrow \left| \frac{n-\sqrt{n^2+n}}{n+ \sqrt{n^2+n}} \right| < 2\epsilon
The problem here is I'm not sure how this makes the proof any easier. It seems like now I must start with the assumption that this part is less than 2\cdot\epsilon but I don't see how to isolate n in this inequality. Any nudge in the right direction (no spoilers, please!) would be greatly appreciated.
Where n \in \mathbb{N} and \lim is the limit of a sequence as n\to\infty.
From the definition of a limit, I know that I need to show that \exists{N}:n>N\Rightarrow\left|\sqrt{n^2+n}-n-\frac{1}{2}\right| < \epsilon
Through algebraic manipulation I was able to arrive at
\left| \sqrt{n^2+n} - n - \frac{1}{2} \right| = \left| \frac{n-\sqrt{n^2+n}}{n+ \sqrt{n^2+n}} \right|
Which now means that I must show that
\exists N : n>N \Rightarrow \left| \frac{n-\sqrt{n^2+n}}{n+ \sqrt{n^2+n}} \right| < 2\epsilon
The problem here is I'm not sure how this makes the proof any easier. It seems like now I must start with the assumption that this part is less than 2\cdot\epsilon but I don't see how to isolate n in this inequality. Any nudge in the right direction (no spoilers, please!) would be greatly appreciated.
Last edited: