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In this section, we examine a powerful tool for evaluating limits. This tool, known as L’Hôpital’s rule , uses derivatives to calculate limits. With this rule, we will be able to evaluate many limits we have not yet been able to determine. Instead of relying on numerical evidence to conjecture that a limit exists, we will be able to show definitively that a limit exists and to determine its exact value.
L’Hôpital’s rule can be used to evaluate limits involving the quotient of two functions. Consider
If then
However, what happens if and We call this one of the indeterminate forms , of type This is considered an indeterminate form because we cannot determine the exact behavior of as without further analysis. We have seen examples of this earlier in the text. For example, consider
For the first of these examples, we can evaluate the limit by factoring the numerator and writing
For we were able to show, using a geometric argument, that
Here we use a different technique for evaluating limits such as these. Not only does this technique provide an easier way to evaluate these limits, but also, and more important, it provides us with a way to evaluate many other limits that we could not calculate previously.
The idea behind L’Hôpital’s rule can be explained using local linear approximations. Consider two differentiable functions and such that and such that For near we can write
and
Therefore,
Since is differentiable at then is continuous at and therefore Similarly, If we also assume that and are continuous at then and Using these ideas, we conclude that
Note that the assumption that and are continuous at and can be loosened. We state L’Hôpital’s rule formally for the indeterminate form Also note that the notation does not mean we are actually dividing zero by zero. Rather, we are using the notation to represent a quotient of limits, each of which is zero.
Suppose and are differentiable functions over an open interval containing except possibly at If and then
assuming the limit on the right exists or is or This result also holds if we are considering one-sided limits, or if
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