jet
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Think of the graph of cos(x); it oscillates between -1 and 1.
We know that as f(x) -->∞, ln(f(x)) must also approach ∞. Since cos(x) never approaches infinity, there is no way the composite function, ln(cos(x)) will ever approach positive infinity either.
We know that as x --> 0, ln(x) --> -∞. Therefore if f(x) -->0, ln(f(x)) --> -∞.
Since we know cos(x) --> 0 quite often, we can say that ln(cos(x)) --> -∞ when cos(x) --> 0
We know that as f(x) -->∞, ln(f(x)) must also approach ∞. Since cos(x) never approaches infinity, there is no way the composite function, ln(cos(x)) will ever approach positive infinity either.
We know that as x --> 0, ln(x) --> -∞. Therefore if f(x) -->0, ln(f(x)) --> -∞.
Since we know cos(x) --> 0 quite often, we can say that ln(cos(x)) --> -∞ when cos(x) --> 0