ASYMPTOTE


An 'asymptote' is a straight line or curve ''A'' to which another curve ''B'' (the one being studied) approaches closer and closer as one moves along it. As one moves along ''B'', the distance between it and the asymptote ''A'' tends to become smaller and smaller overall, and eventually never becomes longer than any specified distance. A curve may or may not touch or cross its asymptote. In fact, the curve may intersect the asymptote an infinite number of times, but its maximal deviation from the asymptote keeps getting smaller.
If a curve ''C'' has the curve ''L'' as an asymptote, one says that ''C'' is 'asymptotic' to ''L''.
In the graph of f(x)= frac{1}{x}, the x and y axes are the asymptotes.


Contents
Asymptotes and graphs of functions
Other meanings
See also

Asymptotes and graphs of functions


Asymptotes are formally defined using limits.
Suppose ''f'' is a function. Then the line ''y'' = ''a'' is a 'horizontal asymptote' for ''f'' if
:lim_{x o infty} f(x) = a ,mbox{ or } lim_{x o -infty} f(x) = a.
Intuitively, this means that ''f''(''x'') can be made as close as desired to ''a'' by making ''x'' big enough. How big is big enough depends on how close one wishes to make ''f''(''x'') to ''a''. This means that far out on the curve, the curve will be close to the line.
Note that if
:lim_{x o infty} f(x) = a ,mbox{ and } lim_{x o -infty} f(x) = b
then the graph of ''f'' has two horizontal asymptotes: ''y'' = ''a'' and ''y'' = ''b''. An example of
such a function is the arctangent function.
The line ''x'' = ''a'' is a 'vertical asymptote' of a function ''f'' if either of the following conditions is true:
# lim_{x o a^{-}} f(x)=pminfty
# lim_{x o a^{+}} f(x)=pminfty
Intuitively, if ''x'' = ''a'' is an asymptote of ''f'', then, if we imagine ''x'' approaching ''a'' from one side, the
value of ''f''(''x'') grows without bound; i.e., ''f''(''x'') becomes large (positively or negatively), and, in
fact, becomes larger than any set value.
A specific example of asymptotes can be found in the graph of the function ''f''(''x'') = 1/''x'', in which two asymptotes are seen: the horizontal line ''y'' = 0 and the vertical line ''x'' = 0.
Note that ''f''(''x'') may or may not be defined at ''a'': what the function is doing
precisely at ''x'' = ''a'' does not affect the asymptote. For example, consider the function
:f(x) = egin{cases} rac{1}{x} & mbox{if } x > 0, \ 5 & mbox{if } x le 0 end{cases}
As lim_{x o 0^{+}} f(x) = infty, ''f''(''x'') has a vertical asymptote at 0, even though f(0) = 5.
Asymptotes of a graph of a function need not be parallel to the ''x''- or ''y''-axis, as shown by the graph of ''f''(''x'')=''x'' +1/''x'',
which is asymptotic to the ''y''-axis and the line ''y'' = ''x''.
When an asymptote is not parallel to the ''x''- or ''y''-axis, it is called an 'oblique asymptote'.
If ''y'' = ''mx'' + ''b'', is any non-vertical line, then the function ''f''(''x'') is asymptotic to it if
lim_{x o infty} f(x)-(mx+b) = 0 , mbox{ or } lim_{x o -infty} f(x)-(mx+b) = 0
/x}+1/x.

Other meanings


A function ''f''(''x'') can be said to be 'asymptotic' to a function ''g''(''x'') as ''x'' → ∞. This has any of four distinct meanings:
# ''f''(''x'') − ''g''(''x'') → 0.
# ''f''(''x'') / ''g''(''x'') → 1.
# ''f''(''x'') / ''g''(''x'') has a nonzero limit.
# ''f''(''x'') / ''g''(''x'') is bounded and does not approach zero. See Big O notation.

See also



Asymptotic analysis

Asymptotic curve

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