89. Limits as \(x\) tends to \(\infty\).
We shall now return to functions of a continuous real variable. We shall confine ourselves entirely to one-valued functions,1 and we shall denote such a function by \(\phi(x)\). We suppose \(x\) to assume successively all values corresponding to points on our fundamental straight line \(\Lambda\), starting from some definite point on the line and progressing always to the right. In these circumstances we say that \(x\) tends to infinity, or to \(\infty\), and write \(x \to \infty\). The only difference between the ‘tending of \(n\) to \(\infty\)’ discussed in the last chapter, and this ‘tending of \(x\) to \(\infty\)’, is that \(x\) assumes all values as it tends to \(\infty\), i.e. that the point \(P\) which corresponds to \(x\) coincides in turn with every point of \(\Lambda\) to the right of its initial position, whereas \(n\) tended to \(\infty\) by a series of jumps. We can express this distinction by saying that \(x\) tends continuously to \(\infty\).
As we explained at the beginning of the last chapter, there is a very close correspondence between functions of \(x\) and functions of \(n\). Every function of \(n\) may be regarded as a selection from the values of a function of \(x\). In the last chapter we discussed the peculiarities which may characterise the behaviour of a function \(\phi(n)\) as \(n\) tends to \(\infty\). Now we are concerned with the same problem for a function \(\phi(x)\); and the definitions and theorems to which we are led are practically repetitions of those of the last chapter. Thus corresponding to Def. 1 of § 58 we have:
When this is the case we may write \[\lim_{x \to \infty} \phi(x) = l,\] or, when there is no risk of ambiguity, simply \(\lim\phi(x) = l\), or \(\phi(x) \to l\). Similarly we have:
We then write \[\phi(x) \to \infty.\] Similarly we define \(\phi(x) \to -\infty\).2 Finally we have:
The reader will remember that in the last chapter we considered very carefully various less formal ways of expressing the facts represented by the formulae \(\phi(n) \to l\), \(\phi(n) \to \infty\). Similar modes of expression may of course be used in the present case. Thus we may say that \(\phi(x)\) is small or nearly equal to \(l\) or large when \(x\) is large, using the words ‘small’, ‘nearly’, ‘large’ in a sense similar to that in which they were used in Ch. IV.
90. Limits as \(x\) tends to \(-\infty\).
The reader will have no difficulty in framing for himself definitions of the meaning of the assertions ‘\(x\) tends to \(-\infty\)’, or ‘\(x \to -\infty\)’ and \[\lim_{x \to -\infty} \phi(x) = l,\quad \phi(x) \to \infty,\quad \phi(x) \to -\infty.\] In fact, if \(x = -y\) and \(\phi(x) = \phi(-y) = \psi(y)\), then \(y\) tends to \(\infty\) as \(x\) tends to \(-\infty\), and the question of the behaviour of \(\phi(x)\) as \(x\) tends to \(-\infty\) is the same as that of the behaviour of \(\psi(y)\) as \(y\) tends to \(\infty\).
91. Theorems corresponding to those of Ch. IV, §§ 63-67.
The theorems concerning the sums, products, and quotients of functions proved in Ch. IV are all true (with obvious verbal alterations which the reader will have no difficulty in supplying) for functions of the continuous variable \(x\). Not only the enunciations but the proofs remain substantially the same.
92. Steadily increasing or decreasing functions.
The definition which corresponds to that of § 69 is as follows: the function \(\phi(x)\) will be said to increase steadily with \(x\) if \(\phi(x_{2}) \geq \phi(x_{1})\) whenever \(x_{2} > x_{1}\). In many cases, of course, this condition is only satisfied from a definite value of \(x\) onwards, i.e. when \(x_{2} > x_{1} \geq x_{0}\). The theorem which follows in that section requires no alteration but that of \(n\) into \(x\): and the proof is the same, except for obvious verbal changes.
If \(\phi(x_{2}) > \phi(x_{1})\), the possibility of equality being excluded, whenever \(x_{2} > x_{1}\), then \(\phi(x)\) will be said to be steadily increasing in the stricter sense. We shall find that the distinction is often important (cf. §§ 108-109).
The reader should consider whether or no the following functions increase steadily with \(x\) (or at any rate increase steadily from a certain value of \(x\) onwards): \(x^{2} – x\), \(x + \sin x\), \(x + 2\sin x\), \(x^{2} + 2\sin x\), \([x]\), \([x] + \sin x\), \([x] + \sqrt{x – [x]}\). All these functions tend to \(\infty\) as \(x \to \infty\).
- Thus \(\sqrt{x}\) stands in this chapter for the one-valued function \(+\sqrt{x}\) and not (as in § 26) for the two-valued function whose values are \(+\sqrt{x}\) and \(-\sqrt{x}\).↩︎
- We shall sometimes find it convenient to write \(+\infty\), \(x \to +\infty\), \(\phi(x) \to +\infty\) instead of \(\infty\), \(x \to \infty\), \(\phi(x) \to \infty\).↩︎
- In the corresponding definition of SecNo 62, we postulated that \(|\phi(n)| < K\) for all values of \(n\), and not merely when \(n \geq n_{0}\). But then the two hypotheses would have been equivalent; for if \(|\phi(n)| < K\) when \(n \geq n_{0}\), then \(|\phi(n)| < K’\) for all values of \(n\), where \(K’\) is the greatest of \(|\phi(1)|\), \(|\phi(2)|\), …, \(|\phi(n_{0} – 1)|\) and \(K\). Here the matter is not quite so simple, as there are infinitely many values of \(x\) less than \(x_{0}\).↩︎
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