AP Calculus AB Unit 1 Notes: Understanding Continuity

0.0(0)
Studied by 0 people
0%Unit 1 Mastery
0%Exam Mastery
Build your Mastery score
multiple choiceMultiple Choice
call kaiCall Kai
Supplemental Materials
Card Sorting

1/24

Last updated 3:04 PM on 3/12/26
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced
Call with Kai

No analytics yet

Send a link to your students to track their progress

25 Terms

1
New cards

Continuity (intuitive idea)

A function is continuous at a point if its graph has no break there—informally, you can draw it without lifting your pencil (but the formal definition uses limits and function values).

2
New cards

Discontinuity

A point where a function fails to be continuous; determined by limit behavior and the function value, not just how the graph looks.

3
New cards

Removable discontinuity

A discontinuity where the two-sided limit exists and is finite, but the function value is missing (undefined) or not equal to the limit (often appears as a “hole” or misplaced dot).

4
New cards

Jump discontinuity

A discontinuity where both one-sided limits exist as finite numbers but are not equal, so the two-sided limit does not exist.

5
New cards

Infinite discontinuity

A discontinuity where the function grows without bound near a point (limit goes to ±∞), typically producing a vertical asymptote.

6
New cards

Left-hand limit

(\lim_{x\to a^-} f(x)): the value(s) f(x) approaches as x approaches a from values less than a.

7
New cards

Right-hand limit

(\lim_{x\to a^+} f(x)): the value(s) f(x) approaches as x approaches a from values greater than a.

8
New cards

Two-sided limit

(\lim_{x\to a} f(x)): exists only when both one-sided limits exist and are equal.

9
New cards

Vertical asymptote

A vertical line (x=a) where function values blow up (approach ±∞), indicating an infinite discontinuity.

10
New cards

Formal definition of continuity at (x=a)

f is continuous at a if (1) (f(a)) is defined, (2) (\lim{x\to a} f(x)) exists, and (3) (\lim{x\to a} f(x)=f(a)).

11
New cards

“Perfect handshake” (limit-value match)

A way to remember continuity: the value the function approaches near a (the limit) must equal the value the function takes at a.

12
New cards

Misplaced dot (continuity failure)

When (\lim_{x\to a} f(x)) exists but (f(a)) is defined at a different value, causing a removable discontinuity.

13
New cards

Indeterminate form (0/0)

A substitution result that signals more algebraic work is needed (e.g., factoring or rationalizing); it does not automatically mean the limit does not exist.

14
New cards

Factor-and-cancel technique

A method to evaluate limits and detect removable discontinuities by factoring expressions and canceling common factors (valid for simplifying near the point, not at the point where the factor is zero).

15
New cards

Rationalizing (using a conjugate)

A technique for limits with radicals: multiply by the conjugate to eliminate radicals and simplify, often revealing a removable discontinuity.

16
New cards

Conjugate

For expressions like (\sqrt{u}-v), the conjugate is (\sqrt{u}+v); multiplying by it can simplify a radical expression.

17
New cards

Right-continuous at (x=a)

A one-sided continuity condition: (\lim_{x\to a^+} f(x)=f(a)), used at left endpoints or domain start points.

18
New cards

Left-continuous at (x=a)

A one-sided continuity condition: (\lim_{x\to a^-} f(x)=f(a)), used at right endpoints or domain end points.

19
New cards

Continuous on an open interval ((a,b))

A function is continuous on ((a,b)) if it is continuous at every point strictly between a and b.

20
New cards

Continuous on a closed interval ([a,b])

Requires continuity on ((a,b)) plus right-continuity at a and left-continuity at b.

21
New cards

“Danger points” for continuity

Inputs where continuity may fail, such as zeros of denominators, invalid radical inputs (negative radicand), nonpositive log inputs, or piecewise switch points.

22
New cards

Rational function continuity rule

A rational function is continuous everywhere its denominator is not zero (discontinuities occur where the denominator equals 0).

23
New cards

Intermediate Value Theorem (IVT)

If f is continuous on ([a,b]) and N is between (f(a)) and (f(b)), then there exists (c\in[a,b]) such that (f(c)=N).

24
New cards

IVT sign-change (root guarantee)

If f is continuous on ([a,b]) and (f(a)\cdot f(b)<0), then there exists at least one (c\in[a,b]) with (f(c)=0).

25
New cards

Removing a discontinuity (redefining a point)

If (\lim{x\to a} f(x)) exists and is finite but f is not continuous at a, define a new value (g(a)=\lim{x\to a} f(x)) (changing only that point) to make the function continuous there.

Explore top notes

note
Biology - Evolution
Updated 1484d ago
0.0(0)
note
History of England
Updated 1283d ago
0.0(0)
note
KOREAN - IMPORTANT VOCABULARY
Updated 1262d ago
0.0(0)
note
iPhone SE 4_ What To Expect.mp4
Updated 936d ago
0.0(0)
note
Photons
Updated 908d ago
0.0(0)
note
Factorisation (copy)
Updated 1081d ago
0.0(0)
note
Biology - Evolution
Updated 1484d ago
0.0(0)
note
History of England
Updated 1283d ago
0.0(0)
note
KOREAN - IMPORTANT VOCABULARY
Updated 1262d ago
0.0(0)
note
iPhone SE 4_ What To Expect.mp4
Updated 936d ago
0.0(0)
note
Photons
Updated 908d ago
0.0(0)
note
Factorisation (copy)
Updated 1081d ago
0.0(0)

Explore top flashcards

flashcards
faf
40
Updated 964d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
faf
40
Updated 964d ago
0.0(0)