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Unit one of Calculus AB Limits and Continuity overview

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Junior / 11th Grade
Course
Calculus AB








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Institution
Junior / 11th grade
Course
Calculus AB
School year
5

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Uploaded on
January 12, 2025
Number of pages
4
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Dr.miller
Contains
All classes

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Key Concepts

●​ Limits describe the behavior of a function as the input approaches a certain value
●​ Continuity refers to a function being defined at every point within its domain
without any breaks or gaps
●​ One-sided limits consider the function's behavior as the input approaches a value
from either the left or right side
●​ Infinite limits occur when the output of a function grows arbitrarily large or small
as the input approaches a certain value
○​ Vertical asymptotes are associated with infinite limits and represent a line
that the function approaches but never reaches
●​ Limit laws and properties enable the evaluation and simplification of complex limit
expressions
●​ Applications of limits include analyzing the behavior of functions in real-world
scenarios and solving optimization problems


Limit Definition and Notation

●​ The limit of a function f(x)f(x) as xx approaches a value aa is denoted as
lim⁡x→af(x)=Llimx→a​f(x)=L
●​ This notation means that as xx gets closer to aa (but not necessarily equal to aa),
the output f(x)f(x) gets arbitrarily close to LL
●​ The limit does not depend on the function's value at x=ax=a, but rather the
behavior of the function near aa
●​ Limits can be evaluated from both the left and right sides of aa, denoted as
lim⁡x→a−f(x)limx→a−​f(x) and lim⁡x→a+f(x)limx→a+​f(x), respectively
●​ For a limit to exist, the left-hand and right-hand limits must be equal
●​ The limit of a function can exist even if the function is undefined at the point of
interest


Evaluating Limits

●​ Direct substitution can be used to evaluate limits when the function is continuous
at the point of interest
○​ Simply substitute the value of aa into the function f(x)f(x) to find the limit
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