Advanced L’Hôpital Applications & Real-World Behavior

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Quizzes Created: 7682 | Total Attempts: 9,547,133
| Questions: 15 | Updated: Dec 17, 2025
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1) Evaluate lim(x→∞) (ln(3x))/(ln(5x))

Explanation

First, we check the form of this limit. As x approaches 0, e^x - 1 approaches e^0 - 1 = 1 - 1 = 0, and x approaches 0, giving us a 0/0 indeterminate form. We can apply L'Hôpital's Rule by differentiating the numerator and denominator. The derivative of e^x - 1 is e^x, and the derivative of x is 1. So the limit becomes lim(x→0) e^x/1 = lim(x→0) e^x. As x approaches 0, e^x approaches e^0 = 1. Therefore, the limit equals 1.

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About This Quiz
Advanced Lhpital Applications & Real-world Behavior - Quiz

Want to connect limit behavior to real-world mathematical growth? In this quiz, you’ll apply L’Hôpital’s Rule to functions that model exponential growth, decay, and polynomial comparisons. You’ll evaluate limits involving multiple transformations, rewrite tricky forms to make them solvable, and decide when the rule works — and when it doesn’t.... see moreStep by step, you’ll see how L’Hôpital’s Rule turns complex, real-world expressions into meaningful conclusions about how functions behave at extreme values!
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2) Evaluate lim(x→0) (1 - cos(2x))/(x·sin(x))

Explanation

First, we check the form of this limit. As x approaches 0, 1 - cos(x) approaches 1 - 1 = 0, and x² approaches 0, giving us a 0/0 indeterminate form. We can apply L'Hôpital's Rule by differentiating the numerator and denominator. The derivative of 1 - cos(x) is sin(x), and the derivative of x² is 2x. So the limit becomes lim(x→0) sin(x)/(2x). This is still a 0/0 form, so we apply L'Hôpital's Rule again. The derivative of sin(x) is cos(x), and the derivative of 2x is 2. So the limit becomes lim(x→0) cos(x)/2 = cos(0)/2 = 1/2.

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3) Evaluate limx→0 (e^x - 1 - x - x²/2)/x³

Explanation

First, we check the form of this limit. As x approaches infinity, x² approaches infinity and e^x approaches infinity, giving us an ∞/∞ indeterminate form. We can apply L'Hôpital's Rule by differentiating the numerator and denominator. The derivative of x² is 2x, and the derivative of e^x is e^x. So the limit becomes lim(x→∞) (2x)/(e^x). This is still an ∞/∞ form, so we apply L'Hôpital's Rule again. The derivative of 2x is 2, and the derivative of e^x is e^x. So the limit becomes lim(x→∞) 2/(e^x). As x approaches infinity, e^x grows without bound, so 2/(e^x) approaches 0. Therefore, the limit equals 0.

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4) Evaluate limx→∞ (x - ln(x))

Explanation

First, we check the form of this limit. As x approaches 0, tan(x) - x approaches 0 - 0 = 0, and x³ approaches 0, giving us a 0/0 indeterminate form. We can apply L'Hôpital's Rule by differentiating the numerator and denominator. The derivative of tan(x) - x is sec²(x) - 1, and the derivative of x³ is 3x². So the limit becomes lim(x→0) (sec²(x) - 1)/(3x²). This is still a 0/0 form, so we apply L'Hôpital's Rule again. The derivative of sec²(x) - 1 is 2sec²(x)tan(x), and the derivative of 3x² is 6x. So the limit becomes lim(x→0) (2sec²(x)tan(x))/(6x) = lim(x→0) (sec²(x)tan(x))/(3x). This is still a 0/0 form, so we apply L'Hôpital's Rule a third time. The derivative of sec²(x)tan(x) is sec²(x)(sec²(x) + 2tan²(x)), and the derivative of 3x is 3. So the limit becomes lim(x→0) sec²(x)(sec²(x) + 2tan²(x))/3. As x approaches 0, sec(x) approaches 1 and tan(x) approaches 0, so this becomes (1)(1 + 0)/3 = 1/3.

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5) To evaluate a limit of the indeterminate form 0 * infinity using L'Hôpital's Rule, you must first rewrite the expression as a fraction.

Explanation

This limit is not in fraction form, so we need to rewrite it to apply L'Hôpital's Rule. We can rewrite x·ln(x) as ln(x)/(1/x). As x approaches 0 from the right, ln(x) approaches -∞ and 1/x approaches ∞, giving us a -∞/∞ indeterminate form. We can apply L'Hôpital's Rule by differentiating the numerator and denominator. The derivative of ln(x) is 1/x, and the derivative of 1/x is -1/x². So the limit becomes lim(x→0+) (1/x)/(-1/x²) = lim(x→0+) -x. As x approaches 0 from the right, -x approaches 0. Therefore, the limit equals 0.

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6) Evaluate lim(x→1) (x^4 - 1)/ln(x)

Explanation

This limit is not in fraction form, so we need to rewrite it to apply L'Hôpital's Rule. We can multiply the numerator and denominator by the conjugate: (√(x² + 1) - x) × (√(x² + 1) + x)/(√(x² + 1) + x) = (x² + 1 - x²)/(√(x² + 1) + x) = 1/(√(x² + 1) + x). As x approaches infinity, this becomes 1/∞ which implies a limit of 0.

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7) Evaluate lim(x→0) (√(1 + x) - 1 - x/2)/x²

Explanation

First, we check the form of this limit. As x approaches 0, e^x - e^(-x) approaches e^0 - e^0 = 1 - 1 = 0, and sin(x) approaches 0, giving us a 0/0 indeterminate form. We can apply L'Hôpital's Rule by differentiating the numerator and denominator. The derivative of e^x - e^(-x) is e^x + e^(-x), and the derivative of sin(x) is cos(x). So the limit becomes lim(x→0) (e^x + e^(-x))/cos(x). As x approaches 0, e^x approaches 1, e^(-x) approaches 1, and cos(x) approaches 1. So the limit equals (1 + 1)/1 = 2.

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8) Evaluate lim(x→∞) (e^x)/(x^100)

Explanation

First, we check the form of this limit. As x approaches 1, x³ - 1 approaches 1 - 1 = 0, and ln(x) approaches ln(1) = 0, giving us a 0/0 indeterminate form. We can apply L'Hôpital's Rule by differentiating the numerator and denominator. The derivative of x³ - 1 is 3x², and the derivative of ln(x) is 1/x. So the limit becomes lim(x→1) (3x²)/(1/x) = lim(x→1) 3x³. As x approaches 1, 3x³ approaches 3(1)³ = 3. Therefore, the limit equals 3.

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9) Evaluate lim(x→0) (ln(1 + x) - x + x²/2)/x³

Explanation

This limit is not in fraction form and has the variable in the exponent. We can take the natural logarithm of the expression to simplify it. Let L = lim(x→0+) (1 + x)^(1/x). Then ln(L) = lim(x→0+) ln((1 + x)^(1/x)) = lim(x→0+) (1/x)·ln(1 + x) = lim(x→0+) ln(1 + x)/x. This is a 0/0 indeterminate form, so we can apply L'Hôpital's Rule. The derivative of ln(1 + x) is 1/(1 + x), and the derivative of x is 1. So ln(L) = lim(x→0+) (1/(1 + x))/1 = lim(x→0+) 1/(1 + x) = 1. Therefore, L = e^1 = e.

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10) Evaluate lim(x→0+) x^x

Explanation

First, we check the form of this limit. As x approaches infinity, ln(x² + 1) approaches infinity and ln(x) approaches infinity, giving us an ∞/∞ indeterminate form. We can apply L'Hôpital's Rule by differentiating the numerator and denominator. The derivative of ln(x² + 1) is (2x)/(x² + 1), and the derivative of ln(x) is 1/x. So the limit becomes lim(x→∞) ((2x)/(x² + 1))/(1/x) = lim(x→∞) (2x²)/(x² + 1). This is still an ∞/∞ form, so we can apply L'Hôpital's Rule again. The derivative of 2x² is 4x, and the derivative of x² + 1 is 2x. So the limit becomes lim(x→∞) 4x/2x = lim(x→∞) 2 = 2.

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11) L'Hôpital's Rule is valid for one-sided limits, such as when x approaches a value from the right side only.

Explanation

First, we check the form of this limit. As x approaches 0, e^(2x) - 1 - 2x approaches e^0 - 1 - 0 = 1 - 1 - 0 = 0, and x² approaches 0, giving us a 0/0 indeterminate form. We can apply L'Hôpital's Rule by differentiating the numerator and denominator. The derivative of e^(2x) - 1 - 2x is 2e^(2x) - 2, and the derivative of x² is 2x. So the limit becomes lim(x→0) (2e^(2x) - 2)/(2x) = lim(x→0) (e^(2x) - 1)/x. This is still a 0/0 form, so we apply L'Hôpital's Rule again. The derivative of e^(2x) - 1 is 2e^(2x), and the derivative of x is 1. So the limit becomes lim(x→0) 2e^(2x)/1 = 2e^0 = 2(1) = 2.

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12) Evaluate lim(x→0) (arcsin(x) - x)/x³

Explanation

L'Hôpital's Rule is a sufficient condition, not a necessary one. If the limit of f'(x)/g'(x) exists, the original limit equals it. However, if the limit of f'(x)/g'(x) does not exist (for example, if it oscillates), L'Hôpital's Rule is inconclusive. The original limit might still exist and would need to be evaluated using a different method, such as the Squeeze Theorem.

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13) Evaluate lim(x→0) (e^(sin(x)) - 1 - sin(x))/x²

Explanation

First, we check the form of this limit as x approaches infinity. The numerator x² + 3x approaches infinity, and the denominator 2x + 1 also approaches infinity, giving us an ∞/∞ indeterminate form. L'Hôpital's Rule can be applied directly to limits of this form without any algebraic manipulation. We can differentiate the numerator to get 2x + 3 and the denominator to get 2, then evaluate lim(x→∞) (2x + 3)/2, which equals infinity. Since the original limit is of the form ∞/∞, L'Hôpital's Rule can be directly applied, making the statement true.

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14) When applying L'Hôpital's Rule to lim(x→0) (1 - cos(x))/x², we need to apply the rule twice to obtain a determinate form.

Explanation

First, we check the form of this limit. As x approaches 0, sin(x) - x + x³/6 approaches 0 - 0 + 0 = 0, and x⁵ approaches 0, giving us a 0/0 indeterminate form. We can apply L'Hôpital's Rule by differentiating the numerator and denominator. The derivative of sin(x) - x + x³/6 is cos(x) - 1 + x²/2, and the derivative of x⁵ is 5x^4. This is still a 0/0 form, so we continue applying L'Hôpital's Rule. After the second derivative, we get (-sin(x) + x)/(20x³). After the third derivative, we get (-cos(x) + 1)/(60x²). After the fourth derivative, we get sin(x)/(120x). After the fifth derivative, we get cos(x)/120. As x approaches 0, cos(x) approaches 1, so the limit equals 1/120.

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15) L'Hôpital's Rule can be applied to lim(x→0+) x·ln(x) without first rewriting the expression as a quotient.

Explanation

To determine if L'Hôpital's Rule applies, we need to check if the limit produces an indeterminate form. As x approaches 0, the numerator x² + 1 approaches 1, and the denominator x approaches 0, giving us 1/0, which is not an indeterminate form. L'Hôpital's Rule specifically applies only to the indeterminate forms 0/0 or ∞/∞. Since this limit is not of either form, L'Hôpital's Rule cannot be applied. Instead, we recognize this as a limit that approaches infinity (or negative infinity depending on direction), not an indeterminate form. Therefore, the statement is false.

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Evaluate lim(x→∞) (ln(3x))/(ln(5x))
Evaluate lim(x→0) (1 - cos(2x))/(x·sin(x))
Evaluate limx→0 (e^x - 1 - x - x²/2)/x³
Evaluate limx→∞ (x - ln(x))
To evaluate a limit of the indeterminate form 0 * infinity using...
Evaluate lim(x→1) (x^4 - 1)/ln(x)
Evaluate lim(x→0) (√(1 + x) - 1 - x/2)/x²
Evaluate lim(x→∞) (e^x)/(x^100)
Evaluate lim(x→0) (ln(1 + x) - x + x²/2)/x³
Evaluate lim(x→0+) x^x
L'Hôpital's Rule is valid for one-sided limits, such as when x...
Evaluate lim(x→0) (arcsin(x) - x)/x³
Evaluate lim(x→0) (e^(sin(x)) - 1 - sin(x))/x²
When applying L'Hôpital's Rule to lim(x→0) (1 - cos(x))/x², we...
L'Hôpital's Rule can be applied to lim(x→0+) x·ln(x) without first...
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