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- [Voiceover] So we're told that f of x
is equal to x over one minus cosine of x minus two,
and they ask us to select the correct description
of the one-sided limits of f at x equals two.
And we see that right at x equals two,
if we try to evaluate f of two,
we get two over one minus cosine
of two minus two,
which is the same thing as cosine of zero,
and cosine of zero is just one,
and so one minus one is zero,
and so the function is not defined at x equals two,
and that's why it might be interesting to find the limit
as x approaches two, and especially the one-sided limit.
And the one-sided limit.
Well, we'll obviously leave it at that
so let's try to approach this.
So there's actually a couple of ways you could do it.
There is one way you could do this without a calculator
by just inspecting what's going on here,
and thinking about the properties of the cosine function,
and if that inspires you, pause the video and work it out,
and I will do that at the end of this video.
The other way, if you have a calculator
is to do it with a little bit of a table
like we've done in other example problems.
So if we think about x approaching two
from the positive direction, well then.
We can make a little table here
where you have x, and then you have f of x.
And so for approaching two from values greater than two,
you could have 2.1,
2.01.
Now the reason why I said calculators,
these aren't trivial to evaluate
because this would be what, 2.1
over 1 minus cosine of,
2.1 minus two is 0.1.
I do not know what cosine of 0.1 is without a calculator.
I do know that cosine of zero is one
so this is very, very close to one without getting to one,
and it's going to be less than one.
Cosine is never going to be greater than one.
The cosine function is bounded between negative one
is less than cosine of x.
I'll just write the x, then I don't need the parenthesis.
Which is less than one.
The cosine function just oscillates between these two values
so this, this thing is gonna be approaching one
but it's going to be less than one.
It definitely cannot be greater than one,
and that's actually a good hint
for how you can just explore the structure here,
and then you could say, "All right, 2.01.
"Well, that's going to be 2.01
"over one minus
"cosine of 0.01."
And this is going to even closer to one
without being one but it's going to be less than one.
No matter what, cosine of anything
is going to be between negative one and one,
and it could even be including those things
but as we approach two,
this thing is going to approach one,
I guess you could say approach one from below.
And so you can start to make some intuitions here.
If it's approaching from below, this thing over here,
this whole expression is going to be positive,
and as we approach x equals two.
Well, the numerator is positive.
It's approaching two.
The denominator is positive so this whole thing
has to be approaching a positive value
or it could become unbounded
in the positive direction as we'll see,
this is unbounded because this thing
is even closer to one than this thing,
and you would see that if you have a calculator
but needless to say, this is going to be unbounded
in the positive direction so we're going to be going
towards positive infinity so these two choices have that,
and we can make the exact same argument as we approach x
in the negative or from below,
as we approach two from below, I should say.
So that's x, and that is f of x,
and once again, I don't have a calculator in front of me.
You could evaluate these things at a calculator,
and become very clear that these are positive,
and as we get closer to,
they become even larger and larger positive values,
and the same thing would happen if you did 1.9,
and if you did 1.99
because here, you'd be 1.9 over one minus cosine.
Now here, you'd have 1.9 minus two
so this would be negative 0.1.
Let me scroll over a little bit.
The second one would be 1.99
over one minus cosine
of negative 0.01.
And cosine of negative 0.1
is the same thing as cosine of 0.1.
Cosine of negative 0.01
is the same thing as cosine of 0.01.
So these two things, this is going to be equal to that.
That is going to be equal to that.
And once again, we're gonna be approaching positive infinity
so the only choice where all of that is true
is this first one.
Whether we approach two from the right-hand side
or the left-hand side, we're approaching positive infinity
but the other way you could have deduced that is say,
"Okay, as we approach two,
the numerator is going to be positive
'cause two is positive, and then over here,
as we approach two,
cosine of anything can never be greater than one.
It's going to approach one but be less than one
so if this is less than as x approaches two.
It becomes one when x is equal to two.
Well then, this right over here,
one minus something less than one is going to be positive
so you have a positive divided by a positive
so you're definitely going to get positive values
as you approach two.
And we know, and they've already told us
that these are going to be unbounded based on the choices
so you would also pick that
but you should also feel good about it,
that the closer that we get to two,
the closer that this value right over here gets to zero.
And the closer that this value gets to zero,
the closer we get to one.
The closer we get to one, the smaller the denominator gets.
And then you divide by smaller and smaller denominators,
you're going to become unbounded towards infinity,
which is exactly what we see in that first choice.