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#341 | |||
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FFR Player
Join Date: Aug 2006
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Well, I don't know if anyone in here is in Calculus, but you can have infinity x 0 = any number... it just depends how you arrive at infinity and zero. Also, you have to assume you CAN go out to infinity.
For instance, take the limit of x sin(1/x) as x goes to infinity. The "x" term will approach infinity (obviously), and the "sin(1/x)" term approaches 0. Yet, as we can see on a graphing calculator, the ends of this equation clearly go to 1. So in this case, infinity x 0 = 1. In another example, take the limit of x ln(x) as x goes to 0. The "x" term reaches 0 and the "ln(x) term reaches -infinity. Using l'Hopital's Rule with (ln(x))/(1/x), the limit is now (1/x)/-(1/x^2). Multiply top and bottom by x^2 and now the answer is the limit of -x as x goes to 0, which is 0. Here, infinity (or rather, -infinity) x 0 = 0. It all depends how the numbers are reached...
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#342 | |||||
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Imagine you are running down a road and you are trying to catch up to a turtle. You approach the turtle and get to half the distance to the turtle from where you started. You then get to half that distance. This continues. When does it stop? Your distance to the turtle, as its being halved an infinite number of times, approaches 0. If it never reaches 0, you can never pass the turtle. This is one of Zeno's paradoxes. It's also a gigantic headache. The thing is. Since you can actually pass the turtle, something has to happen to your distance as it gets closer to zero. What happens? Leave that to physicists. What we do know is that basically the distance at some point becomes non-existent. And so why can't the distance between two numbers have the same effect? In other words if X approaches infinitely close to infinity why can't X be infinity? Besides, X was approaching infinity, not 1/inf approaching 0. Quote:
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The limit as x approaches infinity of sin 1/x does not equal 1. The sin of 0 does not equal 1. Sin (0) = 0. The limit as x approaches infinity of cos 1/x does equal 1 however. Quote:
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#344 |
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FFR Player
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but still isnt anything * 0 still 0????
its basic mathematics say infinity = 99999999999999999999999 in this case 99999999999999999999999 * 0 = 0 no matter how you look at it anything * 0 = 0 |
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#345 |
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FFR Player
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this is just like pi
btw x/inf gets you a very small # provided x does not = 0 it just tiny .00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001 still aint 0 no matter how many 0 you add |
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#346 |
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is against custom titles
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Read the thread before you post in it. Also, don't double post and get some decent grammar.
--Guido http://andy.mikee385.com |
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#347 | |
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FFR Simfile Author
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Infinity does not have a quantifiable 'rate'...that is, you cannot imagine a number that is constantly getting smaller and smaller like you have shown here. It is false to do so. Infinity exists without any bounds, and therefore its rate has no bounds. Instead of imagining what you have just shown, take a minute to try and imagine what would happen if you let those zeros extend such that they exist everywhere that can exist at any given point in time. Difficult, isn't it? But what happens to that one? It's gone! You'll never find it. The unbounded set of zeros infront of it exist everywhere that can exist, unbounded annihilating the 1. If anything, just remember that you cannot quantify the value of infinity in this case.
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#348 | |||||
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FFR Player
Join Date: Aug 2006
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Age: 36
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Like it's been said many times before, we ALL know X can never reach infinity... but if we couldn't ASSUME it does, Calculus couldn't ever work, and most of the technology you use today wouldn't be able to function, just because things can't be quantized into infinitely small/large parts. Calculus is SOOO awesome too. You can prove that 1^infinity is exactly e... or any power of e for that matter. I guess some people won't learn until it's presented in front of them, which obviously can't happen as infinity isn't a concrete idea. Oh well XD
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#349 |
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FFR Player
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Maybe my informal education is limited, but I'm fairly certain you can't "prove" 1^inf is equal to any power of e because, well, 1^inf isn't even really equal to anything and e is a mathematical constant.
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last.fm Last edited by lord_carbo; 03-20-2007 at 04:16 PM.. |
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#350 |
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I can't agree that -infinite exists.
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#351 |
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Heh, this great, I can't wait till I take Calculus AP next year....
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#352 |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: New York
Age: 34
Posts: 504
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Which Ap course? AB or BC? Just A?
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#353 | |
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So, you really can say that "1^infinity" can be anything, especially if you change that expression above to be (1-y/x)^x. Then you get e^-y as the limit, which can be any real number (yes even zero).
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#354 |
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It does, and if you take/learn calculus you'll use it.
1^infinity isn't indeterminate--it's undefined. There's a difference. And AFAIK, expressions can't be indeterminate because you're not solving for anything in an expression, but that's irrelevant either way.
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last.fm Last edited by lord_carbo; 03-20-2007 at 06:06 PM.. |
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#355 |
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Super Scooter Happy
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Why do people keep posting in this thread? x(
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#356 |
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Here's my two cents:
Infinity = any number x = variable (any real, nonreal, imaginary number) 0 = nothing. Infinity * X = Any real, nonreal, imaginary number. " * 0= Nothing. Anything * 0 = absolutely nothing.
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#358 |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: New York
Age: 34
Posts: 504
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STOP POSTING IN THIS THREAD. Please.
Infinity * 0 = Undefined. |
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#359 | |
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Uhh... yes it is /\ and no it isn't \/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Undefined Edit: Even better: http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Indeterminate.html
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Last edited by bluguerrilla; 03-20-2007 at 06:18 PM.. Reason: Even better.. |
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#360 | |
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Edit: OH.
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last.fm Last edited by lord_carbo; 03-20-2007 at 06:27 PM.. |
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