What is the limit of #sqrt(4x^2-1) / x^2# as x goes to negative infinity?

2 Answers

The limit is zero.

Explanation:

As #x# approaches #-\infty#, the #-1# inside the root becomes insignificant (which is to say, #4x^2# and #4x^2-1# are asymptotically equivalent, which again means that you can substitute one with the other and the limits doesn't change).

So, you have the following:

#\lim_{x\to -\infty} {\sqrt{4x^2-1}}/{x^2} = \lim_{x\to -\infty} {\sqrt{4x^2}}/{x^2}#

With the advantage that #\sqrt{4x^2}# is easibly computable, since it is #abs(2x)#. And since #{abs(2x)}/x^2=2/abs(x)#, you can clearly see that this function goes to #0#, as #x# approaches #-\infty#.

Sep 26, 2015

Here is a different way of writing the solution.

Explanation:

#sqrt(4x^2-1) = sqrt(x^2(4-1/x^2))#

# = sqrt(x^2)sqrt(4-1/x^2)#

# = absx sqrt(4-1/x^2)#

As #x rarr-oo# we are concerned with negative values of #x#,.

For #x < 0#, #sqrt(x^2) = absx = -x#.

#lim_(xrarr-oo)sqrt(4x^2-1)/x^2 = lim_(xrarr-oo)(sqrt(x^2)sqrt(4-1/x^2))/x^2#

# = lim_(xrarr-oo)(-xsqrt(4-1/x^2))/x^2#

# = lim_(xrarr-oo)(-sqrt(4-1/x^2))/x#

# = 0#.

(I would describe this as more algebraic and less analytic than the other fine answer provided by Killer Bunny (and George C.).)