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lim x 2 h ( x ) = + .

More generally, we define infinite limits as follows:

Definition

We define three types of infinite limits .

Infinite limits from the left: Let f ( x ) be a function defined at all values in an open interval of the form ( b , a ) .

  1. If the values of f ( x ) increase without bound as the values of x (where x < a ) approach the number a , then we say that the limit as x approaches a from the left is positive infinity and we write
    lim x a f ( x ) = + .
  2. If the values of f ( x ) decrease without bound as the values of x (where x < a ) approach the number a , then we say that the limit as x approaches a from the left is negative infinity and we write
    lim x a f ( x ) = .

Infinite limits from the right : Let f ( x ) be a function defined at all values in an open interval of the form ( a , c ) .

  1. If the values of f ( x ) increase without bound as the values of x (where x > a ) approach the number a , then we say that the limit as x approaches a from the left is positive infinity and we write
    lim x a + f ( x ) = + .
  2. If the values of f ( x ) decrease without bound as the values of x (where x > a ) approach the number a , then we say that the limit as x approaches a from the left is negative infinity and we write
    lim x a + f ( x ) = .

Two-sided infinite limit: Let f ( x ) be defined for all x a in an open interval containing a .

  1. If the values of f ( x ) increase without bound as the values of x (where x a ) approach the number a , then we say that the limit as x approaches a is positive infinity and we write
    lim x a f ( x ) = + .
  2. If the values of f ( x ) decrease without bound as the values of x (where x a ) approach the number a , then we say that the limit as x approaches a is negative infinity and we write
    lim x a f ( x ) = .

It is important to understand that when we write statements such as lim x a f ( x ) = + or lim x a f ( x ) = we are describing the behavior of the function, as we have just defined it. We are not asserting that a limit exists. For the limit of a function f ( x ) to exist at a , it must approach a real number L as x approaches a . That said, if, for example, lim x a f ( x ) = + , we always write lim x a f ( x ) = + rather than lim x a f ( x ) DNE.

Recognizing an infinite limit

Evaluate each of the following limits, if possible. Use a table of functional values and graph f ( x ) = 1 / x to confirm your conclusion.

  1. lim x 0 1 x
  2. lim x 0 + 1 x
  3. lim x 0 1 x

Begin by constructing a table of functional values.

Table of functional values for f ( x ) = 1 x
x 1 x x 1 x
−0.1 −10 0.1 10
−0.01 −100 0.01 100
−0.001 −1000 0.001 1000
−0.0001 −10,000 0.0001 10,000
−0.00001 −100,000 0.00001 100,000
−0.000001 −1,000,000 0.000001 1,000,000
  1. The values of 1 / x decrease without bound as x approaches 0 from the left. We conclude that
    lim x 0 1 x = .
  2. The values of 1 / x increase without bound as x approaches 0 from the right. We conclude that
    lim x 0 + 1 x = + .
  3. Since lim x 0 1 x = and lim x 0 + 1 x = + have different values, we conclude that
    lim x 0 1 x DNE.

The graph of f ( x ) = 1 / x in [link] confirms these conclusions.

The graph of the function f(x) = 1/x. The function curves asymptotically towards x=0 and y=0 in quadrants one and three.
The graph of f ( x ) = 1 / x confirms that the limit as x approaches 0 does not exist.
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Evaluate each of the following limits, if possible. Use a table of functional values and graph f ( x ) = 1 / x 2 to confirm your conclusion.

  1. lim x 0 1 x 2
  2. lim x 0 + 1 x 2
  3. lim x 0 1 x 2

a. lim x 0 1 x 2 = + ; b. lim x 0 + 1 x 2 = + ; c. lim x 0 1 x 2 = +

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Practice Key Terms 4

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Source:  OpenStax, Calculus volume 1. OpenStax CNX. Feb 05, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11964/1.2
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