What are the limits of complex fractions in calculus?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around evaluating the limit of a complex fraction as x approaches negative infinity, specifically the expression lim_{x->- \infty} \; \frac{(x^6+8)^{1/3}}{4x^2+(3x^4+1)^{1/2}}. Participants are exploring the implications of factoring and the behavior of the terms involved in the limit process.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss various methods of factoring out terms to simplify the limit evaluation. Some suggest factoring out negative powers and others propose using binomial expansion. Questions arise regarding the correctness of arithmetic in the denominator and the implications of factoring out positive versus negative terms.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants providing insights and corrections to each other's arithmetic. There is a focus on clarifying the behavior of square roots and the implications of negative values in the context of limits. Multiple interpretations of the limit evaluation process are being explored without a clear consensus.

Contextual Notes

Participants are grappling with the definitions and properties of square roots, particularly in relation to negative values, and how these affect the limit evaluation. There is also mention of homework constraints and the level of mathematical concepts being discussed, such as binomial expansion and power series.

ciubba
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Homework Statement


Find lim_{x->- \infty} \; \frac{(x^6+8)^{1/3}}{4x^2+(3x^4+1)^{1/2}}

Homework Equations


N/A

The Attempt at a Solution


Factoring out \frac {(-x^6)^{1/3}}{-x^2} leaves me with \frac{(-1-8x^{-6})}{-4+(3+x^{-4})^{1/2<br /> }} Taking the limit at infinity gives me \frac{-1}{-4+3^{1/2}}, which is wrong.
 
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ciubba said:

Homework Statement


Find lim_{x-&gt;- \infty} \; \frac{(x^6+8)^{1/3}}{4x^2+(3x^4+1)^{1/2}}

Homework Equations


N/A

The Attempt at a Solution


Factoring out \frac {(-x^6)^{1/3}}{-x^2} leaves me with \frac{(-1-8x^{-6})}{-4+(3+x^{-4})^{1/2<br /> }} Taking the limit at infinity gives me \frac{-1}{-4+3^{1/2}}, which is wrong.
Why not factor out (x^2/x^2) on the top?... i.e. lim x-> -inf [1+8/x^6]^(1/3) / [4 + SQRT(3+ 1/x^4)]
 
Your arithmetic is wrong (in the denominator).
 
ciubba said:

Homework Statement


Find lim_{x-&gt;- \infty} \; \frac{(x^6+8)^{1/3}}{4x^2+(3x^4+1)^{1/2}}

Homework Equations


N/A

The Attempt at a Solution


Factoring out \frac {(-x^6)^{1/3}}{-x^2} leaves me with \frac{(-1-8x^{-6})}{-4+(3+x^{-4})^{1/2<br /> }} Taking the limit at infinity gives me \frac{-1}{-4+3^{1/2}}, which is wrong.

Why not use ##(x^6+8)^{1/3} = (x^6)^{1/3} (1 + 8 x^{-6})^{1/3} \doteq x^2 [1 + (8/3)x^{-6} + O(x^{-12}) ]##, and a similar result for ##(3 x^4 + 1)^{1/2}##?
 
Svein said:
Your arithmetic is wrong (in the denominator).
Ah, you're right. it should be MINUS root 3 because \sqrt{x^4}=-x^2

Ray Vickson said:
\doteq x^2 [1 + (8/3)x^{-6} + O(x^{-12}) ]
I don't understand how you arrived at this part.

Quantum Defect said:
Why not factor out (x^2/x^2) on the top?... i.e. lim x-> -inf [1+8/x^6]^(1/3) / [4 + SQRT(3+ 1/x^4)]
If I factored out positive x^2, how would I evaluate x at - infinity? Wouldn't I just evaluate at positive infinity, which happens to produce the same result in this case?
 
ciubba said:
[snip]

If I factored out positive x^2, how would I evaluate x at - infinity? Wouldn't I just evaluate at positive infinity, which happens to produce the same result in this case?

Factoring out +x^2 says nothing about what the sign of x is, does it?

The function whose limit is being evaluated is an even function of x, no? f(-x) = f(x) Wouldn't they be expected to have the same limit for very large positive and very large negative values of x?
 
ciubba said:
Ah, you're right. it should be MINUS root 3 because \sqrt{x^4}=-x^2I don't understand how you arrived at this part.

******************************************
Do you agree that ##(x^6+8)^{1/3} = (x^6)^{1/3} (1 + 8 x^{-6})^{1/3} = x^2 (1 + 8 x^{-6})^{1/3}##? If so, then do you agree that we can apply the general binomial expansion? This would be ##(1+v)^r = 1 + rv + O(v^2)##, which holds for ##|v| < 1## and any real ##r## (positive, negative, rational, irrational---anything). If so, just let ##v = 8/x^6## and ##r = 1/3##.
*******************************************

If I factored out positive x^2, how would I evaluate x at - infinity? Wouldn't I just evaluate at positive infinity, which happens to produce the same result in this case?
ciubba said:
Ah, you're right. it should be MINUS root 3 because \sqrt{x^4}=-x^2

If I factored out positive x^2, how would I evaluate x at - infinity? Wouldn't I just evaluate at positive infinity, which happens to produce the same result in this case?
 
Can you link me the formula for that expansion? I've never seen it before.
 
  • #10
Where did the O(v^2) come from? The formula seems to stop at 1+rv.
 
  • #11
ciubba said:
Can you link me the formula for that expansion? I've never seen it before.

Google "binomial expansion". Alternatively, just apply the Maclauren (Taylor) series around ##v=0## to the function ##f(v) = (1+v)^r##.
 
  • #12
I won't be learning about power series until the end of next semester, so it's likely that your explanation is a bit above my level for the time being.

I'm still a bit confused by why it's - root 3.

The only example problem in my book defines (x^6)^1/2= - x^3, but when they factor \sqrt{25x^6} it comes out to +5 rather than -5.
 
  • #13
ciubba said:

Homework Statement


Find lim_{x-&gt;- \infty} \; \frac{(x^6+8)^{1/3}}{4x^2+(3x^4+1)^{1/2}}

Homework Equations


N/A

The Attempt at a Solution


Factoring out \frac {(-x^6)^{1/3}}{-x^2} leaves me with \frac{(-1-8x^{-6})}{-4+(3+x^{-4})^{1/2<br /> }}
No, it doesn't. It leaves you with \frac{(-1-8x^{-6})}{-4- (3+x^{-4})^{1/2<br /> }}

Taking the limit at infinity gives me \frac{-1}{-4+3^{1/2}}, which is wrong.
 
  • #14
  • #15
ciubba said:
Why doesn't the root 25 change sign in the following picture: http://s10.postimg.org/qb9mxcsmf/1243124.png

It's the same idea except that instead of <br /> \sqrt{x^4}=-x^2 we have \sqrt{x^6}=-x^3

We should NOT have
\sqrt{x^4} = -x^2 \:\longleftarrow\;\text{wrong!}
For any real ##x## we have ##\sqrt{x^4} = x^2## (because ##\sqrt{x^4} > 0 ## and ## x^2 > 0## if ##x \neq 0##; this is the same, whether ##x## is positive or negative. However, ##\sqrt{x^6}## is different. Again, we always have ##\sqrt{x^6} > 0##, but now ##x^3## is >0 if ##x > 0## and is < 0 if ##x < 0##. In fact, if ##x < 0## then ##x^3 < 0##, so we need ##\sqrt{x^6} = -x^3## in that case (where ##x < 0##). On the other hand, if ##x > 0## then we have ##\sqrt{x^6} = x^3##. To summarize:
\sqrt{x^4} = x^2 \;\; \text{always}\\<br /> \sqrt{x^6} = \begin{cases} x^3 &amp; \text{if} \;\; x &gt; 0 \\<br /> -x^3 &amp; \text{if} \;\; x &lt; 0<br /> \end{cases}<br />
 
Last edited:

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