Table of contents
- 0. Functions7h 52m
- Introduction to Functions16m
- Piecewise Functions10m
- Properties of Functions9m
- Common Functions1h 8m
- Transformations5m
- Combining Functions27m
- Exponent rules32m
- Exponential Functions28m
- Logarithmic Functions24m
- Properties of Logarithms34m
- Exponential & Logarithmic Equations35m
- Introduction to Trigonometric Functions38m
- Graphs of Trigonometric Functions44m
- Trigonometric Identities47m
- Inverse Trigonometric Functions48m
- 1. Limits and Continuity2h 2m
- 2. Intro to Derivatives1h 33m
- 3. Techniques of Differentiation3h 18m
- 4. Applications of Derivatives2h 38m
- 5. Graphical Applications of Derivatives6h 2m
- 6. Derivatives of Inverse, Exponential, & Logarithmic Functions2h 37m
- 7. Antiderivatives & Indefinite Integrals1h 26m
- 8. Definite Integrals3h 25m
4. Applications of Derivatives
Differentials
Problem 4.7.32
Textbook Question
17–83. Limits Evaluate the following limits. Use l’Hôpital’s Rule when it is convenient and applicable.
lim_z→0 (tan 4z) / (tan 7z)
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1
Identify the limit to evaluate: lim_{z→0} (tan(4z) / tan(7z)).
Check if the limit results in an indeterminate form by substituting z = 0 into the expression.
Since both tan(4z) and tan(7z) approach 0 as z approaches 0, we have the indeterminate form 0/0.
Apply l'Hôpital's Rule, which states that if lim_{z→c} f(z)/g(z) results in 0/0 or ∞/∞, then lim_{z→c} f(z)/g(z) = lim_{z→c} f'(z)/g'(z), provided the limit on the right exists.
Differentiate the numerator and denominator: f(z) = tan(4z) and g(z) = tan(7z), then find f'(z) and g'(z) to evaluate the new limit.
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