8. Let f(x, y) be the function x3 + y3 xy? Show that the limit lim(9)→(0,0) f (x, y) does not exist by setting y = mx and f(x, y) : showing that the limit depends on m.
8. Let f(x, y) be the function x3 + y3 xy? Show that the limit lim(9)→(0,0) f (x, y) does not exist by setting y = mx and f(x, y) : showing that the limit depends on m.
Calculus For The Life Sciences
2nd Edition
ISBN:9780321964038
Author:GREENWELL, Raymond N., RITCHEY, Nathan P., Lial, Margaret L.
Publisher:GREENWELL, Raymond N., RITCHEY, Nathan P., Lial, Margaret L.
Chapter5: Graphs And The Derivative
Section5.3: Higher Derivatives, Concavity, And The Second Derivative Test
Problem 61E
Related questions
Question
Expert Solution
Step 1
Step by step
Solved in 2 steps with 2 images
Recommended textbooks for you
Calculus For The Life Sciences
Calculus
ISBN:
9780321964038
Author:
GREENWELL, Raymond N., RITCHEY, Nathan P., Lial, Margaret L.
Publisher:
Pearson Addison Wesley,
College Algebra (MindTap Course List)
Algebra
ISBN:
9781305652231
Author:
R. David Gustafson, Jeff Hughes
Publisher:
Cengage Learning
Calculus For The Life Sciences
Calculus
ISBN:
9780321964038
Author:
GREENWELL, Raymond N., RITCHEY, Nathan P., Lial, Margaret L.
Publisher:
Pearson Addison Wesley,
College Algebra (MindTap Course List)
Algebra
ISBN:
9781305652231
Author:
R. David Gustafson, Jeff Hughes
Publisher:
Cengage Learning