QUESTION IMAGE
Question
find the limit. (hint: try multiplying and dividing by the conjugate.)
lim (√(x + 4) - √(x + 9))
x→∞
lim (√(x + 4) - √(x + 9)) =
x→∞
(simplify your answer.)
Step1: Multiply and divide by conjugate
Multiply and divide $\lim_{x
ightarrow\infty}(\sqrt{x + 4}-\sqrt{x + 9})$ by its conjugate $\sqrt{x + 4}+\sqrt{x + 9}$.
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Step2: Simplify the numerator
Simplify the numerator $(x + 4)-(x + 9)$:
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\]
So the limit becomes $\lim_{x
ightarrow\infty}\frac{-5}{\sqrt{x + 4}+\sqrt{x + 9}}$.
Step3: Analyze the limit as $x
ightarrow\infty$
As $x
ightarrow\infty$, both $\sqrt{x + 4}
ightarrow\infty$ and $\sqrt{x + 9}
ightarrow\infty$. Then $\sqrt{x + 4}+\sqrt{x + 9}
ightarrow\infty$.
We know that $\lim_{x
ightarrow\infty}\frac{-5}{\sqrt{x + 4}+\sqrt{x + 9}} = 0$ since the numerator is a non - zero constant and the denominator approaches infinity.
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