Math people.
Math people.
How can lim[(sin x) / x], when x approaches 0, be 1?
sin 0 would be 0, 0/0 is imaginary. Yet it clearly states in my book that the answer is 1. How?
sin 0 would be 0, 0/0 is imaginary. Yet it clearly states in my book that the answer is 1. How?
0/0 is either infinite or undefined, not imaginary
Just plugin a couple numbers to see the progression towards 1.
sin(0.5)/0.5 = 0.95885107720840600054657587043114
sin(0.4)/0.4 = 0.97354585577162622916577939198926
sin(0.3)/0.3 = 0.98506735553779858368440248561676
sin(0.2)/0.2 = 0.99334665397530607729706313559195
sin(0.1)/0.1 = 0.99833416646828152306814198410622
sin(0.01)/0.01 = 0.99998333341666646825424382690997
sin(0.001)/0.001 = 0.99999983333334166666646825397101
Just plugin a couple numbers to see the progression towards 1.
sin(0.5)/0.5 = 0.95885107720840600054657587043114
sin(0.4)/0.4 = 0.97354585577162622916577939198926
sin(0.3)/0.3 = 0.98506735553779858368440248561676
sin(0.2)/0.2 = 0.99334665397530607729706313559195
sin(0.1)/0.1 = 0.99833416646828152306814198410622
sin(0.01)/0.01 = 0.99998333341666646825424382690997
sin(0.001)/0.001 = 0.99999983333334166666646825397101
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Freakaloin
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1. f(0)=sin(0)/0 is not defined - this is why you do the limes
2. proof: http://www.mathematik.net/0-calc_site_d ... mSinX.html
2. proof: http://www.mathematik.net/0-calc_site_d ... mSinX.html
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Freakaloin
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Nightshade
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Re: Math people.
Have you done much work with limits? Approach it from a graphical point of view, and you'll see that approaching zero from the left or right, the value of sin(x)/x tends to 1. That function is called a sinc function, and here's what it looks like:Deji wrote:How can lim[(sin x) / x], when x approaches 0, be 1?
sin 0 would be 0, 0/0 is imaginary. Yet it clearly states in my book that the answer is 1. How?

Understand that in taking a limit of a function, you're not actually plugging in zero. Rather, you're looking at what happens to the function as the argument approaches zero.
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Nightshade
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Nightshade
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I live in Estonia. We don't actually call our math classes anything, we just have 'maths' and simply talk about different topics. Everything is just one topic: algebra or trigonometry, etc., we don't differentiate between subcategories like precalculus algebra and stuff like that. Maybe they do in university, but not in high school.
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stocktroll
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um my college didnt have names like that for Calc, only one 3 part single variable series and then a branching procession of other math classes you could take in many different orders and what not
btw sinx/x is a 0/0 limit which alows you to use L'Hospital rule:
take the derivative of top and bottom and evaulate the limit again:
df/dx = cosx..... lim [x->0] cosx = 1
you can also use L'Hos when the limits are infinity/infinity and can repeat L'Hos over the same funcation as many times needed to see if you can get a limit out of it
btw sinx/x is a 0/0 limit which alows you to use L'Hospital rule:
take the derivative of top and bottom and evaulate the limit again:
df/dx = cosx..... lim [x->0] cosx = 1
you can also use L'Hos when the limits are infinity/infinity and can repeat L'Hos over the same funcation as many times needed to see if you can get a limit out of it
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Nightshade
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stocktroll
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Does it matter whether the infinity is negative or positive? Plus with fractions, can the upper(don't know the term in English) infinity be positive and the lower negative and vice versa?stocktroll wrote: you can also use L'Hos when the limits are infinity/infinity and can repeat L'Hos over the same funcation as many times needed to see if you can get a limit out of it
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stocktroll
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um, lol i dont remember that much detail. Im going to assume yes for a negetive infinity/positive infinity and vice versa but i cant be bothered to wake up my brain after years of slumber
and im sure a double negative infinity will work for the rule
just google it and im certain there will be some useful info
and im sure a double negative infinity will work for the rule
just google it and im certain there will be some useful info
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Nightshade
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