GWM For evaluation of limits. Eg see
Simple method for computing mathematical limits. In many operations we find rational functions.
f(x) f'(0)
lim ------ = ------
x->0 g(x) g'(0)
evaluating rational functions at certain values can give problems, such as what is the result of dividing 0 by 0 in this:
sin(x)
lim ------- (actually it is = 1!)
x->0 x
L'Hopital's rule is "The limit of a rational function can be found by replacing the top and bottom function by their derivatives." [
1]
For the sin(x)/x case, d/dx(sin(x))=cos(x); d/dx(x)=1. So the limit is cos(0)/1 = 1. Other examples:
sin(k.x)
lim ------ = k (= k.cos(0))
x->0 x
(1-cos(x)^2) 1 { sin(0) cos(0) }
lim ------------ = --- {= ------ = ------ }
x->0 x^2 2 { 2.[x=0] 2 }
sin(x)
lim ------ = 1/k (= cos(0)/k)
x->0 k.x
IF the ratio of derivatives is also 0/0, use the second derivative and so on as in the second case above.
[Simplified proof of L'Hôpital: if the slope of the top part of fraction is N times the slope of the bottom part then the ratio of the values near the zero value is N (go to dx, top part has value N.dx, bottom value is dx).] The L'Hôpital rule can also be applied at infinity, where the numerical method should have a problem:
exp(x)
lim ------ = Inf (= exp(Inf)/1 since d/dx(exp(x))=exp(x) & d/dx(x)=1)
x->Inf x
Application of L'Hopital rule may save considerable effort in coding a means of evaluating the limit.