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Ch. 7 - Transcendental Functions
Hass - Thomas' Calculus 15th Edition
Hass15th EditionThomas' CalculusISBN: 9780137616077Not the one you use?Change textbook
Chapter 7, Problem 7.5.75

Theory and Applications
L’Hôpital’s Rule does not help with the limits in Exercises 69–76. 
Try it—you just keep on cycling. Find the limits some other way.
75. lim (x → ∞) e^(x²) / (x e^x)

Verified step by step guidance
1
First, identify the form of the limit as \(x \to \infty\) for the expression \(\frac{e^{x^{2}}}{x e^{x}}\). Notice that the numerator grows like \(e^{x^{2}}\) and the denominator grows like \(x e^{x}\).
Recognize that \(e^{x^{2}}\) grows much faster than \(e^{x}\) as \(x\) becomes very large, since the exponent \(x^{2}\) grows faster than \(x\). This suggests the limit might be infinite, but we need to confirm rigorously.
Since L’Hôpital’s Rule cycles without resolving the limit, try rewriting the expression to compare growth rates more clearly. For example, write the expression as \(\frac{e^{x^{2}}}{x e^{x}} = \frac{e^{x^{2}}}{e^{x}} \cdot \frac{1}{x} = e^{x^{2} - x} \cdot \frac{1}{x}\).
Analyze the exponent in the exponential term: \(x^{2} - x\). As \(x \to \infty\), \(x^{2} - x\) also tends to infinity, so \(e^{x^{2} - x}\) grows without bound much faster than \(x\) grows in the denominator.
Conclude that since \(e^{x^{2} - x}\) dominates the \(\frac{1}{x}\) term, the entire expression grows without bound, and thus the limit tends to infinity.

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Key Concepts

Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.

Limits at Infinity

Limits at infinity describe the behavior of a function as the input grows without bound. Understanding how functions like exponentials and polynomials behave as x approaches infinity is crucial to evaluating such limits.
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Growth Rates of Functions

Different functions grow at different rates; for example, exponential functions grow faster than polynomials. Comparing growth rates helps determine which part of a fraction dominates as x approaches infinity, guiding the evaluation of limits.
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L’Hôpital’s Rule and Its Limitations

L’Hôpital’s Rule is used to evaluate indeterminate forms like 0/0 or ∞/∞ by differentiating numerator and denominator. However, it can fail or lead to cycles if repeated application does not simplify the limit, requiring alternative methods.
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