Prove that \frac{x}{x+1}<\ln(1+x)<x for x>−1,x\ne0

William Boggs

William Boggs

Answered question

2022-01-20

Prove that xx+1<ln(1+x)<x for x>1,x0

Answer & Explanation

Becky Harrison

Becky Harrison

Beginner2022-01-20Added 40 answers

Let f(x)=log(1+x) for x>1. Then f(x)=11+x and the mean-value theorem states that for x0
f(x)=f(0)+(x0)f(c)=x1+c
for some c strictly between 0 and x.
If x>0 then
0<c<x11+x<11+c<1,
and if x<0 then
x<c<011+x>11+c>1.
In both cases, multiplying the inequalities by x gives
x1+x<f(x)=x1+c<x.
porschomcl

porschomcl

Beginner2022-01-21Added 28 answers

Let f(x)=xln(1+x), where x>1.
f(x)=111+x=x1+x, which says that f(x)f(0)=0.
In another hand, let g(x)=ln(1+x)xx+1, where x>1.
Thus, g(x)=11+x1(1+x)2=x(1+x)2, which gives again
that xmin=0 and we obtain g(x)g(0)=0.
Since, x0 we get xx+1<ln(1+x)<x.
Done!
RizerMix

RizerMix

Expert2022-01-27Added 656 answers

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