Asymptote
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- For other uses, see (disambiguation)}}}.
The curve may or may not touch or cross the asymptote. In fact, the curve may intersect the asymptote an infinite number of times.
If a curve C has the curve L as an asymptote, one says that C is asymptotic to L.
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_ f(x) = a \,\mbox \lim_ f(x) = a.]
Note that if
- [\lim_ f(x) = a \,\mbox \lim_ f(x) = b]
The line x=a is a vertical asymptote of a function f if either of the following conditions is true:
- [\lim_ f(x)=\pm\infty]
- [\lim_ f(x)=\pm\infty]
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 effect the asymptote. For example, consider the function
- [f(x) = \begin 1/x & x > 0 \\ 5 & x \le 0 \end]
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= m x + b, is any non-vertical line, then the function f(x) is asymptotic to it if
- [\lim_ f(x)-(mx+b) = 0 \, \mbox \lim_ f(x)-(mx+b) = 0.]
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, but contrast with asymptotic curve.
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