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0.4
0.2
-0.4
-0.2
0.2
0.4
-0.2
-0.4
That is, as x 0, x sin x. This approximation is often used in applications e.g. analyzing
the motion of a simple pendulum for small displacements. Ill use it later on to derive the formulas for
differentiating trig functions.
In terms of limits, this approximation says
sin x
= 1.
x0 x
lim
0
(Notice that plugging in x = 0 gives .) A derivation requires the Sandwich Theorem and a little
0
geometry. What Ill give is not really a proof from first principles; you can think of it as an argument which
makes the result plausible.
tan q
q
1
sin q
q
x
1
Ive drawn a sector subtending an angle inside a circle of radius 1. (Im using instead of x, since
is more often used for the central angle.) The inner right triangle has altitude sin , while the outer right
triangle has altitude tan . The length of an arc of radius 1 and angle is just .
1
(Ive drawn the picture as if is nonnegative. A similar argument may be given if < 0.)
Clearly,
sin tan .
Divide through by sin :
1
As 0,
.
sin
cos
1
1 just plug in. By the Sandwich Theorem,
cos
lim
= 1.
sin
lim
sin
= 1.
x0
sin 7x
.
x
0
Plugging in x = 0 gives . I have to do some more work.
0
The limit formula looks like this:
sin
= 1.
lim
0
(Im using instead of x to avoid confusing the variable in the formula with the variable in the problem.)
The point is that the thing that is going to 0, the thing inside the sine, and the thing on the bottom must be
identical.
In this problem, there is a 7x inside the sine, but an x on the bottom. One or the other must change to
match. I dont have nice ways of altering things inside a sine, but making the bottom into 7x is easy:
lim
x0
sin 7x
sin 7x
= 7 lim
.
x0 7x
x
Let u = 7x. As x 0, u = 7x 0. So
7 lim
x0
x0
Plugging in gives
sin 7x
sin u
= 7 lim
= 7 1 = 7.
u0 u
7x
5x + sin 3x
.
tan 4x 7x cos 2x
0
.
0
sin(junk)
, to which I can apply my limit rule.
junk
1
5x + sin 3x
5x + sin 3x
5x + sin 3x
x
= lim
lim
=
= lim
1
x0 sin 4x
x0 tan 4x 7x cos 2x
x0 sin 4x
7x cos 2x
7x cos 2x
x
cos 4x
cos 4x
sin 3x
sin 3x
5+3
8
5+31
x
3x
= .
= lim
=
lim
sin 4x
1
1
x0
x0 sin 4x
41171
3
4
7 cos 2x
7 cos 2x
x
cos 4x
4x
cos 4x
5+
As x 0,
continuous.
sin 4x sin 3x
,
1 by the sine limit formula. cos 2x, cos 4x 1, since cos 0 = 1 and cos x is
4x
3x
x0
1 cos x
.
x2
0
Plugging in gives . The limit may or may not exist.
0
sin x
Force the
form to appear by using the trig identity 1 (cos x)2 = (sin x)2 :
x
lim
x0
1 cos x 1 + cos x
1 (cos x)2
(sin x)2
1 cos x
=
lim
=
lim
=
lim
=
x0
x2
x2
1 + cos x x0 x2 (1 + cos x) x0 x2 (1 + cos x)
lim
x0
x0
sin x
x
2
1
1 + cos x
= 12
1
1
= .
2
2
1 cos(x6 )
.
x12
If you draw the graph near x = 0 with a graphing calculator or a computer, you are likely to get unusual
results. Heres the picture produced by Mathematica:
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
-1
-0.5
0.5
The problem is that when x is close to 0, both x6 and x12 are very close to 0 producing overflow and
underflow.
Actually, the limit is easy: Let y = x6 . When x 0, y 0, so
1 cos(x6 )
1
1 cos y
= lim
= .
x0
y0
x12
y2
2
lim
For the last step, I used the result from the previous problem.
x0
tan 7x
.
tan 2x
0
. Sigh.
0
3
4.1
-0.1
-0.05
0.05
0.1
3.9
3.8
3.7
3.6
3.5
It looks as thought the limit is defined, and the picture suggests that its around 3.5.
First, Ill break the tangents down into sines and cosines:
lim
x0
sin 7x cos 2x
tan 7x
= lim
.
x0
tan 2x
cos 7x sin 2x
sin
form to appear. Since Ive got sin 7x and sin 2x, I need to make a 7x and a 2x
sin 7x cos 2x
7
sin 7x 2x cos 2x
= lim
.
x0
cos 7x sin 2x
2
7x sin 2x cos 7x
Now take the limit of each piece:
lim
x0
sin 7x
1,
7x
2x
1,
sin 2x
cos 2x
1
= 1.
cos 7x
1
Its easy to derive the formulas for differentiating sine and cosine from the limit formula
sin
=1
0
lim
and the angle addition formulas. Ill work out the formula for sine by way of example.
Let f(x) = sin x. Then
f (x) = lim
h0
sin(x + h) sin x
sin x cos h + sin h cos x sin x
f(x + h) f(x)
= lim
= lim
=
h0
h0
h
h
h
(sin x) lim
h0
sin h
cos h 1
cos h 1
+ (cos x) lim
= (sin x) lim
+ cos x.
h0 h
h0
h
h
Now
lim
h0
cos h 1 cos h + 1
(cos h)2 1
(sin h)2
cos h 1
= lim
= lim
= lim
=
h0
h
h
cos h + 1 h0 h(cos h + 1) h0 h(cos h + 1)
4
lim
h0
sin h
h
lim
h0
sin h
cos h + 1
= 1 0 = 0.
Hence,
f (x) = cos x.
That is,
d
sin x = cos x.
dx
In similar fashion, you can derive the formula
d
cos x = sin x.
dx
Example.
d
3x3 + cos x = 9x2 sin x.
dx
d
(x sin x) = (x)(cos x) + (sin x)(1).
dx
(5 + 2 cos x)(4 cos x + 3) (4 sin x + 3x)(2 sin x)
d 4 sin x + 3x
=
.
dx 5 + 2 cos x
(5 + 2 cos x)2
Example. Its easy to derive the differentiation rules for the other trig functions from the ones for sine and
cosine. Here are the formulas:
d
tan x = (sec x)2
dx
d
sec x = sec x tan x
dx
d
cot x = (csc x)2
dx
d
csc x = csc x cot x
dx
As an example, Ill derive the formula for cosecant. Remember that cosecant is the reciprocal of sine,
so
d
d 1
cos x
1
csc x =
= (sin x)2 cos x =
= cot x csc x.
dx
dx sin x
sin x sin x
Now you can use these formulas to compute derivatives involving these trig functions:
d
(x + sin x)(x2 tan x) = (x + sin x)(2x (sec x)2 ) + (x2 tan x)(1 cos x).
dx
d 2 sec x
(3 + 4 csc x)( sec x tan x) (2 sec x)(4 csc x cot x)
=
.
dx 3 + 4 csc x
(3 + 4 csc x)2
Example. For what values of x does f(x) = x + sin x have a horizontal tangent?
f (x) = 1 + cos x.
So f (x) = 0 where cos x = 1. In the range 0 x 2, this happens at x = . So f (x) = 0 for
x = + 2n, where n is any integer.