51.2k views
4 votes
Help me solve them plsss...both of the questions :)

AND
I'm not sure whether the answer I got for the limit question is correct but i ended with a 0.


Help me solve them plsss...both of the questions :) AND I'm not sure whether the answer-example-1
User Shahanaz
by
7.7k points

2 Answers

0 votes

Answer:

x = 0 + 2πk

√2 / 144

Explanation:

cos x + cos 2x + cos 3x + cos 4x + cos 5x = 5

Cosine has a maximum of 1, so the only way 5 cosine terms can add up to 5 is if each one equals 1.

cos x = 1 → x = 0 + 2πk

cos 2x = 1 → x = 0 + πk

cos 3x = 1 → x = 0 + ⅔πk

cos 4x = 1 → x = 0 + ½πk

cos 5x = 1 → x = 0 + ⅖πk

The least common multiple of 2, 1, ⅔, ½, and ⅖ is 2.

So the solution that satisfies all five is x = 0 + 2πk.

lim(x→3) [√(5 + √(2x + 3)) − 2√2] / (x² − 9)

To solve without L'Hopital's rule, multiply by the conjugate of the numerator.


\lim_(x \to 3) \frac{\sqrt{5+√(2x+3) }\ -\ 2√(2) }{x^(2)-9} * \frac{\sqrt{5+√(2x+3) }\ +\ 2√(2) }{\sqrt{5+√(2x+3) }\ +\ 2√(2)}


\lim_(x \to 3) \frac{5+√(2x+3)\ -\ 8}{(x^(2)-9)(\sqrt{5+√(2x+3) }\ +\ 2√(2))}


\lim_(x \to 3) \frac{√(2x+3)\ -\ 3}{(x^(2)-9)(\sqrt{5+√(2x+3) }\ +\ 2√(2))}

Multiply by the conjugate of the new numerator.


\lim_(x \to 3) \frac{√(2x+3)\ -\ 3}{(x^(2)-9)(\sqrt{5+√(2x+3) }\ +\ 2√(2))} *(√(2x+3)\ +\ 3)/(√(2x+3)\ +\ 3)


\lim_(x \to 3) \frac{2x+3-9}{(x^(2)-9)(\sqrt{5+√(2x+3) }\ +\ 2√(2))(√(2x+3)\ +\ 3)}


\lim_(x \to 3) \frac{2x-6}{(x^(2)-9)(\sqrt{5+√(2x+3) }\ +\ 2√(2))(√(2x+3)\ +\ 3)}


\lim_(x \to 3) \frac{2(x-3)}{(x-3)(x+3)(\sqrt{5+√(2x+3) }\ +\ 2√(2))(√(2x+3)\ +\ 3)}


\lim_(x \to 3) \frac{2}{(x+3)(\sqrt{5+√(2x+3) }\ +\ 2√(2))(√(2x+3)\ +\ 3)}


(2)/((6)(4√(2))(6))


(√(2))/(144)

User ThitSarNL
by
8.2k points
5 votes


\bold{\text{Answer:}\quad (\sqrt2)/(144)}

Explanation:

When you plug in 3 directly to the equation, you get 0/0

Since it is indeterminate, you have to use L'Hopital's Rule.

That means that you find the limit of the DERIVATIVE of the numerator and the DERIVATIVE of the denominator.


(d)/(dx)(\sqrt{5+√(2x+3)}-2\sqrt2)\quad = \frac{1}{2\sqrt{5+√(2x+3)}(√(2x+3))}\\\\\\f'(3)\ \text{for the numerator}\ =(1)/(12\sqrt2)\\\\\\\\(d)/(dx)(x^2-9) = 2x\\\\\\f'(3) \text{for the denominator}\quad = 6\\\\\\\frac{f'(3)\ \text{numerator}}{f'(3)\ \text{denominator}}\quad = ((1)/(12\sqrt2))/(6)\quad = (1)/(72\sqrt2)\quad \rightarrow \large\boxed{(\sqrt2)/(144)}

User Vinzz
by
8.4k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories