I had a math problem that I need help with. I already have the answer but I can't arrive at the explanation.
It is the following:
P(x)=(KP0e2x)/(K+P0(e2x-1))
limx -- infinity
They want us to take the limit going to infinity. K and P0 are constants.
I would think that since e2x would most likely be infinity, that infinity multiplied by the constants would be infinity in the numerator.
In the denominator, there should be infinity + constant.
However, the book says the answer is K and I don't know why this would be the case.
Do any experts out there know why the answer would be K?
Thanks much for any help at understanding.
It is the following:
P(x)=(KP0e2x)/(K+P0(e2x-1))
limx -- infinity
They want us to take the limit going to infinity. K and P0 are constants.
I would think that since e2x would most likely be infinity, that infinity multiplied by the constants would be infinity in the numerator.
In the denominator, there should be infinity + constant.
However, the book says the answer is K and I don't know why this would be the case.
Do any experts out there know why the answer would be K?
Thanks much for any help at understanding.
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