- #1
faust9
- 692
- 2
Howdy, I'm stumped by a seemingly easy L'Hopitals limit question.
[tex]\lim_{t\rightarrow 0}\ \frac{\ln t}{t^2-1}[/tex]
I said the limit doesn't exist, but the asker claims it does. I tried various transformations so that I could use L'Hopitals theorm but with no success. I keep getting [tex]\frac{- \infty}{-1}[/tex] so I can't take the derivative of the top and the bottom to get the answer.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
[tex]\lim_{t\rightarrow 0}\ \frac{\ln t}{t^2-1}[/tex]
I said the limit doesn't exist, but the asker claims it does. I tried various transformations so that I could use L'Hopitals theorm but with no success. I keep getting [tex]\frac{- \infty}{-1}[/tex] so I can't take the derivative of the top and the bottom to get the answer.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.