Unit 1 Limits: How Calculus Describes Approaching, Not Just Plugging In

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25 Terms

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Limit

The value that a function’s outputs approach as the input gets close to a particular number (even if the function is not well-behaved or not defined at that number).

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Limit Notation

The statement (\lim_{x\to a} f(x)=L) meaning the outputs of (f(x)) get arbitrarily close to (L) when (x) is taken sufficiently close to (a).

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“Approaches” Language

A verbal/arrow form of a limit statement: (f(x)\to L) as (x\to a), equivalent to (\lim_{x\to a} f(x)=L).

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Two-Sided Limit

A limit (\lim_{x\to a} f(x)) that considers (x) approaching (a) from both the left and the right.

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Left-Hand Limit

(\lim_{x\to a^-} f(x)=L): the values of (f(x)) approach (L) as (x) approaches (a) using inputs less than (a).

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Right-Hand Limit

(\lim_{x\to a^+} f(x)=L): the values of (f(x)) approach (L) as (x) approaches (a) using inputs greater than (a).

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Condition for a Two-Sided Limit to Exist

(\lim{x\to a} f(x)) exists iff both one-sided limits exist and are equal: (\lim{x\to a^-} f(x)=\lim_{x\to a^+} f(x)).

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Limits vs. Function Values

The limit (\lim_{x\to a} f(x)) can exist even if (f(a)) is different from the limit or if (f(a)) does not exist, because limits depend on behavior near (a), not at (a).

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Removable Discontinuity (Hole)

A break in a graph where a single point is missing (often from a factor that cancels); the limit at that (x)-value may exist even though the function value is undefined or different.

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Jump Discontinuity

A discontinuity where the left-hand and right-hand limits exist but are different, so the two-sided limit does not exist.

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Graphical Cue: Open Circle

A graph symbol indicating a “hole” (the function is not defined at that point on the curve), though the limit may still be the (y)-value approached there.

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Graphical Cue: Filled Dot

A graph symbol indicating the actual function value (f(a)) at that input (a), which may differ from the limit.

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Vertical Asymptote (Limit Behavior)

A vertical line (x=a) the graph approaches where (f(x)) grows without bound (toward (\infty) or (-\infty)) as (x\to a).

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Estimating a Limit from a Graph

Find the (y)-value the curve approaches as (x) approaches (a) from the left and right; if both sides approach the same (y), that is the limit.

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Estimating a Limit from a Table

Use values of (x) closer and closer to (a) from below and above and see whether (f(x)) settles toward a single number; compare both sides.

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Direct Substitution (When Valid)

A method where (\lim_{x\to a} f(x)=f(a)) if (f) is continuous at (a) (e.g., polynomials, and rational functions with nonzero denominator at (a)).

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Limit Laws (Algebraic Properties)

Rules that allow limits of sums, differences, constant multiples, products, and quotients (when denominator limit is nonzero) to be computed from limits of simpler pieces.

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Quotient Law Requirement

For (\lim{x\to a} \frac{f(x)}{g(x)}=\frac{L}{M}), the limit (M=\lim{x\to a} g(x)) must exist and satisfy (M\neq 0).

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Indeterminate Form (\frac{0}{0})

A substitution result that does not determine the limit by itself; different expressions producing (0/0) can have different limits, so algebraic manipulation is needed.

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Factoring and Canceling (Limit Technique)

Rewrite an expression by factoring numerator/denominator and canceling common factors (for (x\neq a)) to remove a (0/0) form and then compute the limit.

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Conjugate (Rationalizing)

For an expression with radicals (e.g., (\sqrt{1+x}-1)), multiplying by the conjugate ((\sqrt{1+x}+1)) can simplify and eliminate (0/0).

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Complex Fraction Simplification

A technique for limits with fractions inside fractions: combine terms over a common denominator or multiply by the least common denominator to expose factors that cancel.

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Special Trigonometric Limit

The foundational limit (\lim_{x\to 0} \frac{\sin x}{x}=1), used to evaluate many trig limits by rewriting into this form.

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Squeeze Theorem

If (g(x)\le f(x)\le h(x)) near (a) and (\lim{x\to a} g(x)=\lim{x\to a} h(x)=L), then (\lim_{x\to a} f(x)=L).

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Bounding with Trig Inequalities

Using facts like (-1\le \sin x\le 1) and (-1\le \cos x\le 1) (often multiplied by (x^2) or (|x|)) to set up the Squeeze Theorem, especially for oscillatory expressions such as (\sin(1/x)) or (\cos(1/x)).

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