Calculus: Early Transcendentals 8th Edition

Published by Cengage Learning
ISBN 10: 1285741552
ISBN 13: 978-1-28574-155-0

Chapter 13 - Review - Exercises - Page 882: 2

Answer

a) $t \in (-1,0) \cup (0,2]$ b) $\lim\limits_{t \to 0} r(t)=\lt \sqrt 2, 1, 0 \gt$ c) $r'(t) =\lt \dfrac{-1}{2\sqrt {2-t}},\dfrac{te^t-e^t+1}{t^2}, \dfrac{1}{t+1} \gt$

Work Step by Step

a) Here, the domain of the $x$ component is: $\sqrt{2-t}$ domain is $t \in (-\infty, 2]$ The domain of the $y$ component is: $\dfrac{e^t-1}{t}$ domain is $t \in (-\infty,0) \cup (0, \infty)$ The domain of the $z$ component is: $ln(1+t)$ domain is $t \in (-1, \infty)$ Hence, $t \in (-1,0) \cup (0,2]$ b) Here, $\lim\limits_{t \to 0}\sqrt {2-t}=\sqrt 2$ $\lim\limits_{t \to 0} =\lim\limits_{t \to 0} \dfrac{e^t}{t}=1$ and $ \lim\limits_{t \to 0}ln(1+t)=\ln 1=0$ Hence, $\lim\limits_{t \to 0} r(t)=\lt \sqrt 2, 1, 0 \gt$ c) We need to take the derivative of each component. Here, $r'(t) =\lt \dfrac{-1}{2\sqrt {2-t}},\dfrac{te^t-e^t+1}{t^2}, \dfrac{1}{t+1} \gt$
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