In analytic geometry, an asymptote () of a curve is a line such that the distance between the curve and the line approaches zero as one or both of the x or y coordinates tends to infinity. In projective geometry and related contexts, an asymptote of a curve is a line which is tangent to the curve at a point at infinity.
The word asymptote is derived from the Greek language ἀσύμπτωτος ( asumptōtos) which means "not falling together", from ἀ Privative alpha + σύν "together" + πτωτ-ός "fallen". Oxford English Dictionary, second edition, 1989. The term was introduced by Apollonius of Perga in his work on conic sections, but in contrast to its modern meaning, he used it to mean any line that does not intersect the given curve.D.E. Smith, History of Mathematics, vol 2 Dover (1958) p. 318
There are three kinds of asymptotes: horizontal, vertical and oblique. For curves given by the graph of a function , horizontal asymptotes are horizontal lines that the graph of the function approaches as x tends to Vertical asymptotes are vertical lines near which the function grows without bound. An oblique asymptote has a slope that is non-zero but finite, such that the graph of the function approaches it as x tends to
More generally, one curve is a curvilinear asymptote of another (as opposed to a linear asymptote) if the distance between the two curves tends to zero as they tend to infinity, although the term asymptote by itself is usually reserved for linear asymptotes.
Asymptotes convey information about the behavior of curves in the large, and determining the asymptotes of a function is an important step in sketching its graph., §4.18. The study of asymptotes of functions, construed in a broad sense, forms a part of the subject of asymptotic analysis.
Consider the graph of the function shown in this section. The coordinates of the points on the curve are of the form where x is a number other than 0. For example, the graph contains the points (1, 1), (2, 0.5), (5, 0.2), (10, 0.1), ... As the values of become larger and larger, say 100, 1,000, 10,000 ..., putting them far to the right of the illustration, the corresponding values of , .01, .001, .0001, ..., become infinitesimal relative to the scale shown. But no matter how large becomes, its reciprocal is never 0, so the curve never actually touches the x-axis. Similarly, as the values of become smaller and smaller, say .01, .001, .0001, ..., making them infinitesimal relative to the scale shown, the corresponding values of , 100, 1,000, 10,000 ..., become larger and larger. So the curve extends further and further upward as it comes closer and closer to the y-axis. Thus, both the x and y-axis are asymptotes of the curve. These ideas are part of the basis of concept of a limit in mathematics, and this connection is explained more fully below.Reference for section: "Asymptote" The Penny Cyclopædia vol. 2, The Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (1841) Charles Knight and Co., London p. 541
where is the limit as x approaches the value a from the left (from lesser values), and is the limit as x approaches a from the right.
For example, if ƒ( x) = x/( x–1), the numerator approaches 1 and the denominator approaches 0 as x approaches 1. So
The function ƒ( x) may or may not be defined at a, and its precise value at the point x = a does not affect the asymptote. For example, for the function
has a limit of +∞ as , ƒ( x) has the vertical asymptote , even though ƒ(0) = 5. The graph of this function does intersect the vertical asymptote once, at (0, 5). It is impossible for the graph of a function to intersect a vertical asymptote (or a vertical line in general) in more than one point. Moreover, if a function is continuous at each point where it is defined, it is impossible that its graph does intersect any vertical asymptote.
A common example of a vertical asymptote is the case of a rational function at a point x such that the denominator is zero and the numerator is non-zero.
If a function has a vertical asymptote, then it isn't necessarily true that the derivative of the function has a vertical asymptote at the same place. An example is
This function has a vertical asymptote at because
and
The derivative of is the function
For the sequence of points
that approaches both from the left and from the right, the values are constantly . Therefore, both of at can be neither nor . Hence doesn't have a vertical asymptote at .
For example, the arctangent function satisfies
So the line is a horizontal asymptote for the arctangent when x tends to , and is a horizontal asymptote for the arctangent when x tends to .
Functions may lack horizontal asymptotes on either or both sides, or may have one horizontal asymptote that is the same in both directions. For example, the function has a horizontal asymptote at y = 0 when x tends both to and because, respectively,
Other common functions that have one or two horizontal asymptotes include (that has an hyperbola as it graph), the Gaussian function the error function, and the logistic function.
In the first case the line is an oblique asymptote of ƒ( x) when x tends to +∞, and in the second case the line is an oblique asymptote of ƒ( x) when x tends to −∞.
An example is ƒ( x) = x + 1/ x, which has the oblique asymptote y = x (that is m = 1, n = 0) as seen in the limits
where a is either or depending on the case being studied. It is good practice to treat the two cases separately. If this limit doesn't exist then there is no oblique asymptote in that direction.
Having m then the value for n can be computed by
where a should be the same value used before. If this limit fails to exist then there is no oblique asymptote in that direction, even should the limit defining m exist. Otherwise is the oblique asymptote of ƒ( x) as x tends to a.
For example, the function has
so that is the asymptote of ƒ( x) when x tends to +∞.
The function has
So does not have an asymptote when x tends to +∞.
The degree of the numerator and degree of the denominator determine whether or not there are any horizontal or oblique asymptotes. The cases are tabulated below, where deg(numerator) is the degree of the numerator, and deg(denominator) is the degree of the denominator.
+ The cases of horizontal and oblique asymptotes for rational functions | |||
< 0 | |||
= 0 | y = the ratio of leading coefficients | ||
= 1 | y = the quotient of the Euclidean division of the numerator by the denominator | ||
> 1 | none | no linear asymptote, but a curvilinear asymptote exists |
The vertical asymptotes occur only when the denominator is zero (If both the numerator and denominator are zero, the multiplicities of the zero are compared). For example, the following function has vertical asymptotes at x = 0, and x = 1, but not at x = 2.
If the degree of the numerator is more than 1 larger than the degree of the denominator, and the denominator does not divide the numerator, there will be a nonzero remainder that goes to zero as x increases, but the quotient will not be linear, and the function does not have an oblique asymptote.
If a known function has an asymptote, then the scaling of the function also have an asymptote.
For example, the upper right branch of the curve y = 1/ x can be defined parametrically as x = t, y = 1/ t (where t > 0). First, x → ∞ as t → ∞ and the distance from the curve to the x-axis is 1/ t which approaches 0 as t → ∞. Therefore, the x-axis is an asymptote of the curve. Also, y → ∞ as t → 0 from the right, and the distance between the curve and the y-axis is t which approaches 0 as t → 0. So the y-axis is also an asymptote. A similar argument shows that the lower left branch of the curve also has the same two lines as asymptotes.
Although the definition here uses a parameterization of the curve, the notion of asymptote does not depend on the parameterization. In fact, if the equation of the line is then the distance from the point A( t) = ( x( t), y( t)) to the line is given by
An important case is when the curve is the graph of a real function (a function of one real variable and returning real values). The graph of the function y = ƒ( x) is the set of points of the plane with coordinates ( x, ƒ( x)). For this, a parameterization is
An asymptote can be either vertical or non-vertical (oblique or horizontal). In the first case its equation is x = c, for some real number c. The non-vertical case has equation , where m and are real numbers. All three types of asymptotes can be present at the same time in specific examples. Unlike asymptotes for curves that are graphs of functions, a general curve may have more than two non-vertical asymptotes, and may cross its vertical asymptotes more than once.
For example, the function
A plane curve of degree n intersects its asymptote at most at n−2 other points, by Bézout's theorem, as the intersection at infinity is of multiplicity at least two. For a conic, there are a pair of lines that do not intersect the conic at any complex point: these are the two asymptotes of the conic.
A plane algebraic curve is defined by an equation of the form P( x, y) = 0 where P is a polynomial of degree n
Over the complex numbers, P n splits into linear factors, each of which defines an asymptote (or several for multiple factors). Over the reals, P n splits in factors that are linear or quadratic factors. Only the linear factors correspond to infinite (real) branches of the curve, but if a linear factor has multiplicity greater than one, the curve may have several asymptotes or parabolic branches. It may also occur that such a multiple linear factor corresponds to two complex conjugate branches, and does not corresponds to any infinite branch of the real curve. For example, the curve has no real points outside the square , but its highest order term gives the linear factor x with multiplicity 4, leading to the unique asymptote x=0.
The distance between the hyperboloid and cone approaches 0 as the distance from the origin approaches infinity.
More generally, consider a surface that has an implicit equation where the are homogeneous polynomials of degree and . Then the equation defines a cone which is centered at the origin. It is called an asymptotic cone, because the distance to the cone of a point of the surface tends to zero when the point on the surface tends to infinity.
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