graphing f ( x ) = x ln &#x2061;<!-- ⁡ --> ( 1 +

Poftethef9t

Poftethef9t

Answered question

2022-06-16

graphing f ( x ) = x ln ( 1 + 1 x )
I was assigned to draw the graph of this function f ( x ) = x ln ( 1 + 1 x )
When I calculate lim x f ( x ) but the teacher said it's not correct even though its graph on the internet shows that lim x f ( x ) = 1
Please tell me where did I go wrong?

Answer & Explanation

last99erib

last99erib

Beginner2022-06-17Added 19 answers

I am not sure of what you know but for small values of x, we can use a Taylor expansion like so :
ln ( 1 + y ) y + y 2 2 + . . .
Now let 1 x = y, when x , you have y 0 therefore you can write the following :
ln ( 1 + 1 x ) 1 x + 1 2 x 2 + . . .
So when you multiply by x you get :
x ln ( 1 + 1 x ) 1 + 1 2 x + . . .
Where . . . are other power of 1 x wich all tend to 0 as x
It should give you a good idea to what the limit tends to although a little bit more work is needed.
Layla Velazquez

Layla Velazquez

Beginner2022-06-18Added 11 answers

First: You are right! The limit 1 is correct! To prove lim x f ( x ) = 1 you could use L'Hôpital's rule
It holds:
lim x f ( x ) = lim x ln ( 1 + 1 / x ) 1 / x = lim x 1 x 2 + x 1 x 2 = lim x x 2 x 2 + x = lim x 1 1 x + 1 = 1

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