Introduction to Limits

Definition and Importance

Limit: value a function approaches as input approaches a point. Foundation: calculus, analysis, continuity, derivatives, integrals. Importance: describes behavior near points undefined or discontinuous, essential for rigorous calculus.

Notation

Standard notation: limx→a f(x) = L. Reads: "Limit of f(x) as x approaches a equals L." Symbolizes approach, not necessarily equality at x=a.

Scope

Applies to real-valued functions, sequences, multivariable functions, complex functions. Key in modeling change, motion, approximation.

Intuitive Concept of Limits

Approach Without Attainment

Function values near point tend toward a number. Function may not be defined at point. Limit captures intended value near point.

Graphical Interpretation

Graph approaches horizontal line or point. Visualizes limit as y-values nearing L when x approaches a.

Examples

Example: f(x) = (x² - 1)/(x - 1). Undefined at x=1, but limit as x→1 is 2.

Formal Epsilon-Delta Definition

Definition Statement

For limit limx→a f(x) = L, for every ε > 0 there exists δ > 0 such that if 0 < |x - a| < δ then |f(x) - L| < ε.

Components Explained

ε: tolerance in function value. δ: tolerance in input value. Guarantees function values within ε of L whenever inputs are within δ of a, excluding a.

Significance

Removes ambiguity, formalizes intuitive notion. Basis for rigorous proofs in analysis and calculus.

Given ε > 0, ∃ δ > 0: 0 < |x - a| < δ ⇒ |f(x) - L| < ε

One-Sided Limits

Left-Hand Limit

Limit as x approaches a from values less than a. Denoted limx→a⁻ f(x).

Right-Hand Limit

Limit as x approaches a from values greater than a. Denoted limx→a⁺ f(x).

Existence Criteria

Limit exists if and only if left-hand and right-hand limits exist and are equal.

ConditionLimit Existence
limx→a⁻ f(x) = L and limx→a⁺ f(x) = Llimx→a f(x) = L exists
limx→a⁻ f(x) ≠ limx→a⁺ f(x)limx→a f(x) does not exist

Infinite Limits and Limits at Infinity

Infinite Limits

Function values grow without bound as x approaches a point. Written as limx→a f(x) = ∞ or -∞.

Limits at Infinity

Limit of function as x increases or decreases without bound: limx→∞ f(x) = L or ±∞.

Interpretation

Describes end behavior of functions, asymptotes, horizontal or vertical.

limx→∞ (1/x) = 0limx→0⁺ (1/x) = +∞

Properties of Limits

Linearity

Sum: lim (f + g) = lim f + lim g. Product: lim (fg) = (lim f)(lim g). Scalar multiplication: lim (cf) = c lim f.

Order Preservation

If f(x) ≤ g(x) near a, then lim f(x) ≤ lim g(x) if limits exist.

Squeeze Theorem

If h(x) ≤ f(x) ≤ g(x) near a, and lim h(x) = lim g(x) = L, then lim f(x) = L.

PropertyExpression
Sumlim (f + g) = lim f + lim g
Productlim (fg) = (lim f)(lim g)
Scalar Multiplelim (cf) = c lim f

Continuity and Limits

Definition of Continuity

Function continuous at a if limx→a f(x) = f(a).

Types of Discontinuities

Removable: limit exists, function undefined or different value. Jump: left and right limits differ. Infinite: limit infinite at point.

Limit Role

Limits essential to define and classify continuity, underpin derivative definition.

Common Limit Examples

Polynomial Functions

Limit at a point is function value: limx→a P(x) = P(a).

Rational Functions

Limits depend on factorization, may require simplification to remove discontinuities.

Trigonometric Limits

Notable: limx→0 (sin x)/x = 1, fundamental in calculus.

limx→0 (sin x)/x = 1

Limit Computation Techniques

Direct Substitution

Evaluate f(a) if defined and finite.

Factoring and Simplifying

Remove removable discontinuities by canceling common factors.

Rationalization

Useful for limits involving radicals to simplify expressions.

L’Hôpital’s Rule

Applies to indeterminate forms 0/0 or ∞/∞; uses derivatives.

limx→a f(x)/g(x) = limx→a f'(x)/g'(x)

Indeterminate Forms and Limits

Types of Indeterminate Forms

0/0, ∞/∞, 0·∞, ∞ - ∞, 0⁰, 1^∞, ∞⁰.

Resolution Methods

Algebraic manipulation, L’Hôpital’s Rule, series expansion, substitution.

Examples

Example: limx→0 (1 - cos x)/x² = 1/2 solved via series or L’Hôpital.

Applications of Limits

Derivative Definition

Derivative defined as limh→0 (f(x+h) - f(x))/h, rate of change.

Integral Definition

Definite integral as limit of Riemann sums, approximating area under curves.

Continuity and Discontinuity Analysis

Limits classify points of continuity, essential in function analysis.

Series and Sequences

Limits extend to infinite sums, convergence tests.

Historical Development

Early Ideas

Ancient Greeks: method of exhaustion approximated areas; intuitive limits.

Newton and Leibniz

Founders of calculus, used informal limits in derivatives and integrals.

Cauchy and Weierstrass

Formalized epsilon-delta definition, rigorous analysis foundation.

Modern Implications

Limits underpin real analysis, topology, functional analysis, modern calculus.

References

  • Apostol, T. M., Calculus, Volume 1: One-Variable Calculus, with an Introduction to Linear Algebra, Wiley, 1967, pp. 49–75.
  • Spivak, M., Calculus, Publish or Perish, 2008, pp. 101–130.
  • Rudin, W., Principles of Mathematical Analysis, McGraw-Hill, 1976, pp. 35–50.
  • Stewart, J., Calculus: Early Transcendentals, Cengage Learning, 2015, pp. 60–85.
  • Courant, R., John, F., Introduction to Calculus and Analysis, Volume 1, Springer, 1999, pp. 45–70.