Friday, June 7, 2019

calculus - Finding the limit of fracQ(n)P(n) where Q,P are polynomials




Suppose that Q(x)=anxn+an1xn1++a1x+a0and P(x)=bmxm+bm1xm1++b1x+b0. How do I find limxQ(x)P(x) and what does the sequence Q(k)P(k) converge to?



For example, how would I find what the sequence 8k2+2k1003k2+2k+1 converges to? Or what is limx3x+52x+9?



This is being asked in an effort to cut down on duplicates, see here: Coping with abstract duplicate questions.



and here: List of abstract duplicates.


Answer



Short Answer:




The sequence Q(k)P(k) will converge to the same limit as the function Q(x)P(x). There are three cases:



(i) If n>m then it diverges to either or depending on the sign of anbm.



(ii) If $n

(iii) If n=m then it converges to anbn.


No comments:

Post a Comment

analysis - Injection, making bijection

I have injection f:AB and I want to get bijection. Can I just resting codomain to f(A)? I know that every function i...