QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- - / 1 points find the limit. $lim_{x
ightarrow1}\frac{sin(x - 1)}{x^{2}+x - 2}$
Step1: Factor the denominator
Factor $x^{2}+x - 2=(x + 2)(x - 1)$. So the limit becomes $\lim_{x
ightarrow1}\frac{\sin(x - 1)}{(x + 2)(x - 1)}$.
Step2: Use the limit - property $\lim_{u
ightarrow0}\frac{\sin u}{u}=1$
Let $u=x - 1$. As $x
ightarrow1$, $u
ightarrow0$. Then $\lim_{x
ightarrow1}\frac{\sin(x - 1)}{(x + 2)(x - 1)}=\lim_{u
ightarrow0}\frac{\sin u}{(u + 3)u}=\lim_{u
ightarrow0}\frac{\sin u}{u}\cdot\frac{1}{u + 3}$.
Step3: Evaluate the limit
Since $\lim_{u
ightarrow0}\frac{\sin u}{u}=1$ and $\lim_{u
ightarrow0}\frac{1}{u + 3}=\frac{1}{0 + 3}=\frac{1}{3}$, then $\lim_{u
ightarrow0}\frac{\sin u}{u}\cdot\frac{1}{u + 3}=1\times\frac{1}{3}=\frac{1}{3}$.
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$\frac{1}{3}$