Re: how to solve this limit?
- From: David C. Ullrich <ullrich@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 28 May 2006 13:35:55 -0500
On 28 May 2006 07:39:26 -0700, "Mystera" <yli116@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
so what do you think if m is a positive integer, david?
since m is a positive integer which means that n(=1/m) is a rational,
we cannot use the binominal theorem. how can we do with this condition?
It looks like you only read half of my post. It
wasn't that long.
David C. Ullrich wrote:
On 28 May 2006 02:12:25 -0700, "Larry Hammick"
<larryhammick@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Jean-Marc Gulliet wrote:
Mystera wrote:
lim ( (1+x)^(1/m) - 1 - x/m ) / x^2, x-->0.
thanks.
I just put 1/m = n, so we want the limit at 0 of
((1+x)^n - 1 - nx ) / x^2
which seems to be n-choose-2 or
n(n-1) / 2 = (m-1) / (2 m^2).
Or rather (1-m)/(2m^2).
I suppose this manoeuvre can be justified :)
If n happens to be a positive integer then it's
correct by the binomial theorem, which is
presumably where you got the "n choose 2" from
in the first place.
Otoh, if n is any real then it's correct by the
binomial theorem! A slightly fancier version...
LH
************************
David C. Ullrich
************************
David C. Ullrich
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: how to solve this limit?
- From: Mystera
- Re: how to solve this limit?
- References:
- how to solve this limit?
- From: Mystera
- Re: how to solve this limit?
- From: Jean-Marc Gulliet
- Re: how to solve this limit?
- From: Larry Hammick
- Re: how to solve this limit?
- From: David C . Ullrich
- Re: how to solve this limit?
- From: Mystera
- how to solve this limit?
- Prev by Date: Re: naive question from a non-mathematician
- Next by Date: Re: naive question from a non-mathematician
- Previous by thread: Re: how to solve this limit?
- Next by thread: Re: how to solve this limit?
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|
Loading