AP Calculus AB Unit 1 Notes: Learning to Think in Limits

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25 Terms

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Limit

A value that a function’s outputs approach as the inputs get close to a particular number (based on nearby behavior, not necessarily the function value at that point).

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Limit notation

The expression (\lim_{x\to a} f(x)=L), meaning as (x) gets close to (a), (f(x)) gets close to (L).

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Two-sided limit

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

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Left-hand limit

(\lim_{x\to a^-} f(x)): the value (f(x)) approaches as (x) approaches (a) using only inputs with (x<a).

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Right-hand limit

(\lim_{x\to a^+} f(x)): the value (f(x)) approaches as (x) approaches (a) using only inputs with (x>a).

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Existence of a two-sided limit

(\lim{x\to a} f(x)=L) exists iff (\lim{x\to a^-} f(x)=L) and (\lim_{x\to a^+} f(x)=L) (the one-sided limits agree).

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Limit vs. function value

A limit depends on values near (a); (f(a)) is the function’s value at (a). The limit can exist even if (f(a)) is undefined or not equal to the limit.

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Removable discontinuity (hole)

A point where the graph has an open circle and the function is missing (or redefined) there; the limit may still exist and equals the y-value the curve approaches.

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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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Vertical asymptote

A line (x=a) where function values grow without bound (toward (\infty) or (-\infty)) as (x) approaches (a).

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Infinite limit

A limit where (f(x)) increases/decreases without bound as (x\to a), written as approaching (\infty) or (-\infty).

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DNE (Does Not Exist) for a limit

A limit that is not a single approaching value (commonly because one-sided limits disagree or the function oscillates without settling).

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Direct substitution (limit evaluation)

A method to compute a limit by plugging in (x=a) when the function is continuous at (a) (often works for polynomials and many rational functions).

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Continuity at a point (limit connection)

If a function is continuous at (x=a), then (\lim_{x\to a} f(x)=f(a)).

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Indeterminate form (0/0)

A result from substitution that signals the expression must be simplified (it is not an actual limit value).

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Limit laws

Rules that allow combining limits (sum, difference, constant multiple, product, quotient) when the involved limits exist.

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Quotient limit law (restriction)

(\lim_{x\to a}\frac{f(x)}{g(x)}=\frac{L}{M}) provided (\lim g(x)=M\neq 0).

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Factoring and canceling (limit technique)

An algebra method for (0/0) limits: factor expressions and cancel a common factor to reveal a simpler form valid for (x\neq a) (limits use nearby values).

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Rationalizing with conjugates

A method for (0/0) limits with radicals: multiply by a conjugate (multiplying by 1) to eliminate square roots and simplify.

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Complex rational expression simplification

A technique for fractions within fractions: rewrite using common denominators to clear the complex fraction, then simplify.

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Key trig limit

(\lim_{x\to 0} \frac{\sin x}{x}=1), a foundational result used to evaluate many trigonometric limits.

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Trig limit scaling idea

To evaluate (\lim_{x\to 0}\frac{\sin(kx)}{x}), rewrite as (k\cdot\frac{\sin(kx)}{kx}) so the limit becomes (k).

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Oscillation causing a limit to fail

A situation like (\sin(1/x)) as (x\to 0), where outputs keep varying between values and do not settle to one number (so the limit DNE).

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Estimating limits from graphs and tables

A method to infer (\lim_{x\to a} f(x)) by checking values as (x) approaches (a) from the left and right and seeing what output value the function approaches.

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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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