QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- (limlimits_{x \to a} \frac{x - a}{sqrt{x} - sqrt{a}}, a > 0)
Step1: Rationalize the denominator
We can rationalize the denominator by multiplying the numerator and denominator by the conjugate of the denominator, which is $\sqrt{x} + \sqrt{a}$.
So we have:
\[
\]
Step2: Simplify the denominator
Using the difference of squares formula $(m - n)(m + n)=m^{2}-n^{2}$, the denominator $(\sqrt{x}-\sqrt{a})(\sqrt{x}+\sqrt{a})$ simplifies to $x - a$.
So the expression becomes:
\[
\lim_{x
ightarrow a}\frac{(x - a)(\sqrt{x}+\sqrt{a})}{x - a}
\]
Step3: Cancel out common terms
We can cancel out the common factor $(x - a)$ from the numerator and the denominator (since $x
ightarrow a$ but $x
eq a$ at the limit point, so we can cancel).
After canceling, we get:
\[
\lim_{x
ightarrow a}(\sqrt{x}+\sqrt{a})
\]
Step4: Substitute the limit value
Now we substitute $x = a$ into the expression $\sqrt{x}+\sqrt{a}$.
We have $\sqrt{a}+\sqrt{a}=2\sqrt{a}$.
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$2\sqrt{a}$