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Nasir Kim

Nasir Kim

Answered question

2022-05-23

Let f ( x ) = p ( x ) / q ( x ) be a rational function. Let q have a root at some x=a. It is clear that if q ( x ) divides p ( x ) then the limit of f as x goes to a exists. But is the converse true as well?

Answer & Explanation

Madisyn Avery

Madisyn Avery

Beginner2022-05-24Added 12 answers

The fact that q ( x ) divides p ( x ) cannot be derived if
lim x a p ( x ) q ( x )
exists, be a a root of q ( x ) or not.
Obviously, if a is not a root of q ( x ) the limit exists, by continuity.
If a is a root of q ( x ), then you can write q ( x ) = ( x a ) m q 1 ( x ), where a is not a root of q 1 ( x ): just divide by x a as many times as you can.
In this case m > 0 by assumption. You can also write p ( x ) = ( x a ) n p 1 ( x ), with a not a root of p 1 ( x ); here it is possible that n = 0 (when a is not a root of p ( x ) to begin with. Then we have
p ( x ) q ( x ) = ( x a ) n ( x a ) m p 1 ( x ) q 1 ( x )
and, since q 1 ( a ) 0, the limit
lim x a p 1 ( x ) q 1 ( x )
exists finite. So we just need to look at
(*) lim x a ( x a ) n ( x a ) m
This exists finite if and only if n m, because otherwise it can be rewritten as
lim x a 1 ( x a ) m n
which does not exist if m n is odd (it is ∞ from the right and from the left) and is if m n is even.
If n = m, then the limit ( *) is 1; if n > m, then the limit ( *) is 0.
Just play with some rational function to understand what happens:
lim x 1 x 2 + x 2 x 2 1 = 2
but obviously ( x 1 ) ( x + 1 ) does not divide ( x 1 ) ( x + 2 ).
If you instead mean that the limit exists finite for all roots of q ( x ), then the statement is false nonetheless. For instance
lim x 1 x 2 1 x 3 x 2 + x 1
exists finite, and 1 is the only (real) root of x 3 x 2 + x 1
Isaiah Farrell

Isaiah Farrell

Beginner2022-05-25Added 5 answers

The converse is not necessarily true.
For example
lim x 2 x 2 4 x 2 5 x + 6 = 4
But ( x 2 5 x + 6 ) does not divide ( x 2 4 ) .

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