L'Hopital's Rule to find limit

Peapod

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I understand the basics of l'Hopital's Rule, but I'm having trouble figuring out how to get started with this question, especially since it's a difference rather than a quotient:

lim x->inf [x - ln(x^3 - 1)]

The question also gives the hint: "ln e^x = x", but I'm unsure how to apply it.

If anyone could help me get pointed in the right direction with this problem, I'd be very grateful.
 
The trick here is that you don't know the value of the limit, but you know it does have some value L. So, we have the following declaration:

\(\displaystyle \displaystyle \lim _{x\to \infty }\left(x-ln\left(x^3-1\right)\right)=L\)

Then, what if we try to undo the natural log?

\(\displaystyle \displaystyle e^{\lim _{x\to \infty }\left(x-ln\left(x^3-1\right)\right)}=e^L\)

And there's a property involving e to the power of a limit:

\(\displaystyle \displaystyle e^{\lim _{x\to C}\left(f\left(x\right)\right)}=\lim _{x\to C}\left(e^{f\left(x\right)}\right)\)

So, applying that property we get:

\(\displaystyle \displaystyle e^L=\lim _{x\to \infty }\left(e^{x-ln\left(x^3-1\right)}\right)\)

Try proceeding from there and see what you get.
 
I understand the basics of l'Hopital's Rule, but I'm having trouble figuring out how to get started with this question, especially since it's a difference rather than a quotient:

lim x->inf [x - ln(x^3 - 1)]

The question also gives the hint: "ln e^x = x", but I'm unsure how to apply it.

If anyone could help me get pointed in the right direction with this problem, I'd be very grateful.

The way I would do it:
x - ln(x3-1) = ln(ex) - ln(x3-1) = ln(\(\displaystyle \frac{e^x}{x^3-1}\))
Thus
\(\displaystyle \underset{x \to \infty}{lim}[ x - ln(x^3-1)]\,=\, \underset{x \to \infty}{lim}[ ln(\frac{e^x}{x^3-1}) ]\, =\, ln(\underset{x \to \infty}{lim}[\frac{e^x}{x^3-1}])\)
...
 
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