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Question: How do you find \(\lim \dfrac{{{e}^{t}}-1}{t}\) as \(t \to 0\) using l’Hospital’s rule?...

How do you find limet1t\lim \dfrac{{{e}^{t}}-1}{t} as t0t \to 0 using l’Hospital’s rule?

Explanation

Solution

We have an expression whose value we have to find under the given limits and we have to solve this specifically using hospital’s rule. Firstly, in order to use the hospital’s rule, we have to make the value of the expression as either 00\dfrac{0}{0} or \dfrac{\infty }{\infty }. Then, we will use the l’Hospital’s rule to get the value of the expression.

Complete step by step solution:
According to the given question, we have an expression whose value we have to find using l’Hospital’s rule. We have been given the limit as t0t \to 0.
L’Hospital’s rule states that for limits that gives indeterminate forms such as 00\dfrac{0}{0} or \dfrac{\infty }{\infty }, we can solve the expression by using the formula:
limxcf(x)g(x)=limxcf(x)g(x)\displaystyle \lim_{x\to c}\dfrac{f(x)}{g(x)}=\displaystyle \lim_{x\to c}\dfrac{f'(x)}{g'(x)}
We will start with our solution.
Let us suppose,
L=limt0et1tL=\displaystyle \lim_{t \to 0}\dfrac{{{e}^{t}}-1}{t}-----(1)
The limit given to us t0t \to 0, here tt only approaches 0 and does not get the value of t=0t=0.
But we can see that, when t=0t=0 the expression gives us the indeterminate form that is, 00\dfrac{0}{0}.
L=e010=00L=\dfrac{{{e}^{0}}-1}{0}=\dfrac{0}{0}
So, we can use l’Hospital’s rule for t0t \to 0.
We will be using the l’Hospital’s formula first and then we will be applying the limits.
Using the formula, we get,
L=limt0et1tL=\displaystyle \lim_{t \to 0}\dfrac{{{e}^{t}}-1}{t}
L=limt0ddt(et1)ddt(t)\Rightarrow L=\displaystyle \lim_{t \to 0}\dfrac{\dfrac{d}{dt}({{e}^{t}}-1)}{\dfrac{d}{dt}(t)}
We know that, derivative of et{{e}^{t}} remains et{{e}^{t}} only. 1 is a constant so it will get differentiated to 0. And tt being the variable with respect to which the expression is differentiated, we get 1.
So, we have,
L=limt0ddt(et)ddt(1)ddt(t)\Rightarrow L=\displaystyle \lim_{t \to 0}\dfrac{\dfrac{d}{dt}({{e}^{t}})-\dfrac{d}{dt}(1)}{\dfrac{d}{dt}(t)}
L=limt0et01\Rightarrow L=\displaystyle \lim_{t \to 0}\dfrac{{{e}^{t}}-0}{1}
Now, we will apply the limits, we get,
L=limt0et\Rightarrow L=\displaystyle \lim_{t \to 0}{{e}^{t}}
L=e0=1\Rightarrow L={{e}^{0}}=1
Therefore, the value of the expression is 1.

Note:
The value that we obtained after solving the expression using l’Hospital’s rule can be generalized and can be used straight away without having to do all the above calculation. We have,
limt0et1t=1\displaystyle \lim_{t \to 0}\dfrac{{{e}^{t}}-1}{t}=1
Or
limx0ex1x=1\displaystyle \lim_{x\to 0}\dfrac{{{e}^{x}}-1}{x}=1
Also, we need to remember that, in limt0\displaystyle \lim_{t \to 0}the value of tt do not get equal to 0 in reality, but gets only close enough to 0.