Limits and Derivatives
"Calculus begins with a question: what happens as you get infinitely close?"
1. Chapter Overview
Calculus is the MATHEMATICS OF CHANGE — and it starts HERE. This chapter introduces: LIMITS (what value does a function APPROACH as x gets close to a point?), the ALGEBRA OF LIMITS, and DERIVATIVES (the instantaneous RATE OF CHANGE — the slope of the tangent). The derivative is defined as a LIMIT: f'(x) = lim (h→0) [f(x+h) — f(x)]/h.
2. Limits — The Intuitive Idea
What Is a Limit?
- The value that f(x) APPROACHES as x approaches a certain value (say, a)
- Notation: lim(x→a) f(x) = L — 'the limit of f(x) as x approaches a is L'
Left-Hand and Right-Hand Limits
- Left-hand limit: lim(x→a⁻) f(x) — approaching from values LESS than a
- Right-hand limit: lim(x→a⁺) f(x) — approaching from values GREATER than a
- For the limit to EXIST: lim(x→a⁻) = lim(x→a⁺) (left must equal right)
3. Algebra of Limits
If lim(x→a) f(x) = L and lim(x→a) g(x) = M, then:
- lim[f(x) ± g(x)] = L ± M
- lim[f(x) · g(x)] = L · M
- lim[f(x)/g(x)] = L/M (provided M ≠ 0)
- lim[c · f(x)] = c · L (c is a constant)
Some Standard Limits
- lim(x→a) xⁿ = aⁿ (for any real n)
- lim(x→0) sin x / x = 1 (THE fundamental trigonometric limit)
- lim(x→0) (cos x — 1) / x = 0
- lim(x→0) (eˣ — 1) / x = 1
Limits of Polynomial and Rational Functions
- For polynomial functions: lim(x→a) P(x) = P(a) — simply substitute
- For rational functions: substitute. If denominator → 0, try FACTORING and CANCELLING.
4. The Derivative — Definition as a Limit
What Is a Derivative?
- The derivative f'(x) is the INSTANTANEOUS RATE OF CHANGE of f at x
- Geometrically: the slope of the TANGENT line at that point
Definition (First Principle)
This is the FUNDAMENTAL DEFINITION. Every derivative formula ultimately comes from this limit.
Notation
- f'(x), dy/dx, D(f(x)) — all mean the derivative
5. Derivatives of Standard Functions
| Function f(x) | Derivative f'(x) |
|---|---|
| xⁿ | nxⁿ⁻¹ (Power Rule) |
| sin x | cos x |
| cos x | -sin x |
| tan x | sec² x |
| cot x | -cosec² x |
| sec x | sec x tan x |
| cosec x | -cosec x cot x |
| eˣ | eˣ |
| log x | 1/x |
| c (constant) | 0 |
6. Rules of Differentiation
Sum/Difference Rule
(f ± g)' = f' ± g'
Product Rule
(f · g)' = f'g + fg'
Quotient Rule
(f/g)' = (f'g — fg') / g² (where g ≠ 0)
Chain Rule (for composite functions)
If y = f(u) and u = g(x): dy/dx = (dy/du) × (du/dx)
7. Exam Focus
- Limits — evaluating simple limits, left-hand and right-hand limits
- Standard limits — especially lim(x→0) sin x/x = 1
- Derivative by first principle — apply the definition
- Power rule — derivative of xⁿ is nxⁿ⁻¹
- Derivatives of trigonometric functions
- Product rule, quotient rule
- Chain rule
8. Key Formulas
- f'(x) = lim(h→0) [f(x+h) — f(x)]/h
- d(xⁿ)/dx = nxⁿ⁻¹
- d(sin x)/dx = cos x
- d(cos x)/dx = -sin x
- Product: (uv)' = u'v + uv'
- Quotient: (u/v)' = (u'v — uv')/v²
- Chain: dy/dx = dy/du · du/dx
9. Conclusion
Limits and derivatives are the GATEWAY TO CALCULUS:
- LIMITS: What a function APPROACHES. The foundation of everything.
- DERIVATIVE FROM FIRST PRINCIPLE: The limit of difference quotient. Understand this — you understand what a derivative IS.
- RULES: Power rule, product, quotient, chain. Once you know these, you can differentiate almost anything.
- APPLICATIONS (to come in subsequent classes): Finding maxima/minima. Rates of change. Tangents and normals. Area under curves.
'The derivative is the mathematics of "how fast?" — and that question is one of the most important questions humans have ever asked.'
