Computing: \(\displaystyle\lim_{{{x}\rightarrow{0}}}{\frac{{{\log{{\left({1}+{x}\right)}}}}}{{{x}^{{2}}}}}-{\frac{{{1}}}{{{x}}}}\) Could the following limit be computed

navantegipowh

navantegipowh

Answered question

2022-03-25

Computing: limx0log(1+x)x21x
Could the following limit be computed without L'Hopital and Taylor? Thanks.

Answer & Explanation

Yaritza Phillips

Yaritza Phillips

Beginner2022-03-26Added 12 answers

Here's an approach. Note that you can write the limit as
limx0log(1+x)xx2
and use the following definition:
log(1+x)=11+xdtt
For x small, the midpoint rule gives us that:
log(1+x)x2(1+11+x)=x+12x21+x
and hence we have
limx0x+12x21+xxx2=limx0x+12x2xx2x2=limx012x2x2=t12
You may consider the midpoint rule to be a cheat, since it is typically justified using Taylor's theorem (I suspect that it can be proved without Taylor's theorem, though I haven't tried it).

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?