How to evaluate this limit

You mean you do not know how to continue??!!
No, not with your method :( . My first thought was to multiply by conjugates.
I asked my 10th grade daughter what is infinity - 2*inf + inf expecting her to say 0 but instead she replied inf is not a number so you can't add or subtract them. Thankfully she did not get her math ability from me.
 
View attachment 23311

I want to find this limit but i can't figure it out.Any suggestions?
I would suggest this rationalization;
\(\left[ {\sqrt {n + 3} - 2\sqrt {n + 4} + \sqrt {n + 5} } \right]\left( {\frac{{\left[ {\sqrt {n + 3} + 2\sqrt {n + 4} - \sqrt {n + 5} } \right]}}{{\left[ {\sqrt {n + 3} + 2\sqrt {n + 4} - \sqrt {n + 5} } \right]}}} \right)\)
SEE HERE
 
No, not with your method :( . My first thought was to multiply by conjugates.
I asked my 10th grade daughter what is infinity - 2*inf + inf expecting her to say 0 but instead she replied inf is not a number so you can't add or subtract them. Thankfully she did not get her math ability from me.
in my 1st yr. calculus Calculus, I was taught Taylor's series! Think a bit and you will see the light. May be your daughter can teach you that one or Google it!!

btw you don't have to go to infinity!!
 
in my 1st yr. calculus Calculus, I was taught Taylor's series! Think a bit and you will see the light. May be your daughter can teach you that one or Google it!!
Yes, but these type of limits come before Taylor's series.
 
Top