Quiz:Limit: Difference between revisions
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- The left hand limit at any point other than the left endpoint and the right hand limit at any point other than the right endpoint. | - The left hand limit at any point other than the left endpoint and the right hand limit at any point other than the right endpoint. | ||
{Suppose <math>c</math> is a real number and <math>f</math> is a function whose domain contains an open interval of the form <math>(c - t,c)</math> for some <math>t > 0</math>. Which of the following is true? | |||
|type="()"} | |||
- <math>\lim_{x \to c^-} f(x)</math> exists if and only if <math>f</math> is continuous on the immediate left of <math>c</math>, i.e., there exists <math>\delta > 0</math> such that <math>f</math> is continuous on <math>(c - \delta, c)</math>. Here, "continuous" means that the two-sided limit at every point in the open interval equals the value of the function. | |||
- <math>\lim_{x \to c^-} f(x)</math> exists implies that <math>f</math> is continuous on the immediate left of <math>c</math>, i.e., there exists <math>\delta > 0</math> such that <math>f</math> is continuous on <math>(c - \delta, c)</math>. Here, "continuous" means that the two-sided limit at every point in the open interval equals the value of the function. However, the converse implication does not hold. | |||
- <math>\lim_{x \to c^-} f(x)</math> exists if <math>f</math> is continuous on the immediate left of <math>c</math>, i.e., there exists <math>\delta > 0</math> such that <math>f</math> is continuous on <math>(c - \delta, c)</math>. Here, "continuous" means that the two-sided limit at every point in the open interval equals the value of the function. However, the converse implication does not hold. | |||
+ Neither of the conditions "<math>\lim_{x \to c^-} f(x)</math> exists" and "<math>f</math> is continuous on the immediate left of <math>c</math>" imply one another. | |||
|| We can construct examples illustrating both phenomena. A function that has one piece definition for rationals with another piece definition for irrationals, and the two definitions having the same limit at <math>c</math>, would illustrate how the left hand limit at <math>c</math> can exist without the function being continuous at <math>c</math>. For instance, <math>f(x) := \left \lbrace \begin{array}{rl} 0, & x \mbox{ irrational } \\x, & \mbox{ rational } \\\end{array}\right.</math> at <math>c = 0</math>. For the other direction, consider a function like <math>f(x) := 1/x, x \ne 0</math> at <math>c = 0</math>. This is continuous on the left of 0 but does not have a left hand limit at 0. | |||
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+ Every smaller positive value of <math>\delta</math> works for the same <math>\varepsilon</math>. Also, the given value of <math>\delta</math> works for every larger value of <math>\varepsilon</math>. | + Every smaller positive value of <math>\delta</math> works for the same <math>\varepsilon</math>. Also, the given value of <math>\delta</math> works for every larger value of <math>\varepsilon</math>. | ||
|| See from the definition or the game description. | || See from the definition or the game description. | ||
- Every larger value of <math>\delta</math> works for the same <math>\varepsilon</math>. Also, the given value of | - Every larger value of <math>\delta</math> works for the same <math>\varepsilon</math>. Also, the given value of <math>\delta</math> works for every smaller positive value of <math>\varepsilon</math>. | ||
- Every larger value of <math>\delta</math> works for the same <math>\varepsilon</math>. Also, the given value of <math>\delta</math> works for every larger value of <math>\varepsilon</math>. | - Every larger value of <math>\delta</math> works for the same <math>\varepsilon</math>. Also, the given value of <math>\delta</math> works for every larger value of <math>\varepsilon</math>. | ||
- None of the above statements need always be true. | - None of the above statements need always be true. | ||
Latest revision as of 19:10, 29 September 2012
ORIGINAL FULL PAGE: Limit
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Motivation
Two key ideas
Definition for finite limit for finite function of one variable
Two-sided limit
Left hand limit and right hand limit
Definition of finite limit for function of one variable in terms of a game
Non-existence of limit