What is the limit of cosx as x goes to infinity?

2 Answers
Sep 26, 2015

There is no limit.

Explanation:

Recall or Note:

lim_(xrarroo)f(x) = L if and only if

for every positived epsilon, there is an M that satisfies:
for all x > M, abs(f(x) - L) < epsilon

As x increases without bound, cosx continues to attain every value between -1 and 1. So it cannot be getting and staying within epsilon of some one number, L,

Refer to explanation

Explanation:

Choose two sequences such as

a_n=2n*pi and b_n=(2n+1)*pi where

lim_(n->oo) a_n=oo and lim_(n->oo) b_n=oo

But lim_(n->oo)cos(a_n)=cos(2pin)=1 and lim_(n->oo)cos(b_n)=cos((2n+1)pi)=-1

Hence there is no limit for cosx as x->oo

The theorem that was used for the proof is

**(Divergence Criterion for Functional Limits):
Let f:A→R f:A→R, and let c be a limit point of A. If there exist two sequences (x_n) and (y_n) in A with x_n≠c and y_n≠c, and:
lim_(n->oo)x_n=lim_(n->oo) y_n=c but lim_(n->oo)f(x_n)≠lim_(n->oo)f(y_n)
then we can conclude that the functional lim_(x→c)f(x) does not exist.