Limit of question

seal308

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May 11, 2015
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Hi,

I need help with the following limit.

Limit as n goes to infinity of (-1)^n (n^3 + 2)/(3n^2 + 5)

So what I did was factor out the highest power of n from the numberator and the denominator and simplified and I was left with:

(-1)^n * n(1/3).
But not sure what to do at this point. -1 to infinity would keep changing wouldn't it?

Thanks
 
Hi,

I need help with the following limit.

Limit as n goes to infinity of (-1)^n (n^3 + 2)/(3n^2 + 5)

So what I did was factor out the highest power of n from the numberator and the denominator and simplified and I was left with:

(-1)^n * n(1/3).
But not sure what to do at this point. -1 to infinity would keep changing wouldn't it?

Thanks
Yes it would so there is no limit [the limit doesn't exist]
 
Limit as n goes to infinity of (-1)^n (n^3 + 2)/(3n^2 + 5)

So what I did was factor out the highest power of n from the numberator and the denominator and simplified and I was left with: (-1)^n * n(1/3).
These are known as alternating sequences. Therefore, usual methods do not work such as highest power.

Recall that a sequence has a limit if and only if any subsequence has the same limit.

The sequence \(\displaystyle \dfrac{n^3+2}{3n^2+5}\) does not have a limit. So can the alternating form have a limit?
 
These are known as alternating sequences. Therefore, usual methods do not work such as highest power.

Recall that a sequence has a limit if and only if any subsequence has the same limit.

The sequence \(\displaystyle \dfrac{n^3+2}{3n^2+5}\) does not have a limit. So can the alternating form have a limit?

According to that, no.
Never knew that, thanks.
 
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