Asymptotic and Unbounded Behavior - AP Calculus AB

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Question

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Answer

Remember the fundamental theorem of calculus! If , then .

Since we're given , we need to find the indefinite integral of the equation to get .

To solve for the indefinite integral, we can use the reverse power rule. We raise the power of the exponents by one and divide by that new exponent.

We're going to treat as , as anything to the zero power is one.

For this problem, that would look like:

Remember, when taking an integral, definite or indefinite, we always add , as there could be a constant involved.

Plug that back into the FTOC:

Notice that the 's cancel out.

Plug in our given values from the problem.

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Asymptoteplot

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Question

Evaluate the integral.

Integral from 1 to 2 of (1/x3) dx

Answer

Integral from 1 to 2 of (1/x3) dx

Integral from 1 to 2 of (x-3) dx

Integrate the integral.

from 1 to 2 of (x–2/-2)

(2–2/–2) – (1–2/–2) = (–1/8) – (–1/2)=(3/8)

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Question

Evaluate the following indefinite integral.

Answer

Use the inverse Power Rule to evaluate the integral. Firstly, constants can be taken out of the integral, so we pull the 1/2 out front and then complete the integration according to the rule. We know that for . We see that this rule tells us to increase the power of by 1 and multiply by . Next always add your constant of integration that would be lost in the differentiation. Take the derivative of your answer to check your work.

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Question

Find all vertical asymptotes and horizontal asymptotes of the function,

Answer

1) To find the horizontal asymptotes, find the limit of the function as ,

Therefore, the function has a horizontal asymptote

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2) Vertical asympototes will occur at points where the function blows up, . For rational functions this behavior occurs when the denominator approaches zero.

Factor the denominator and set to zero,

So the graph of has two vertical asymptotes, one at and the other at . They have been drawn into the graph of below. The blue curves represent .

Asymptotes

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Question

What is the indefinite integral of ?

Answer

To solve for the indefinite integral, we can use the reverse power rule. We raise the power of the exponents by one and divide by that new exponent. For this problem, that would look like:

Remember, when taking an integral, definite or indefinite, we always add , as there could be a constant involved.

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Question

Evaluate

Answer

The equation will have a horizontal asymptote y=4.

We can find the horizontal asymptote by looking at the terms with the highest power.

The terms with the highest power here are in the numerator and in the denominator. These terms will "take over" the function as x approaches infinity. That means the limit will reach the ratio of the two terms.

The ratio is

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Answer

For this infinity limit, we need to consider the leading terms of both the numerator and the denominator. In our problem, the leading term of the numerator is larger than the leading term of the denominator. Therefore, it will be growing at a faster rate.

Now, simply input the limit value, and interpret the results.

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Answer

For infinity limits, we need only consider the leading term in both the numerator and the denominator. Here, we have the case that the exponents are equal in the leading terms. Therefore, the limit at infinity is simply the ratio of the coefficients of the leading terms.

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Infinity limits can be found by only considering the leading term in both the numerator and the denominator. In this problem, the numerator has a higher exponent than the denominator. Therefore, it will keep increasing and increasing at a much faster rate. These limits always tend to infinity.

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For infinity limits, we only consider the leading term in both the numerator and the denominator. Then, we need to consider the exponents of the leading terms. Here, the denominator has a higher degree than the numerator. Therefore, we have a bottom heavy fraction. Even though we are evaluating the limit at negative infinity, this will still tend to zero because the denominator is growing at a faster rate. You can convince yourself of this by plugging in larger and larger negative values. You will just get a longer and smaller decimal.

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