Vertical tangent
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In mathematics, a vertical tangent is intuitively a tangent line with infinite slope, thus being vertical. Generally speaking, vertical tangents occur at vertical asymptotes, but this is not always the case.
[edit] Formal definition
More formally, vertical tangents can be defined using calculus: A function f(x) is said to have a vertical tangent at x = a if and only if .
[edit] Counterexample
An example of a function which has a vertical asymptote but no vertical tangent is
The derivative of this function, then, is
In this function, there is a vertical asymptote at x = 0 because . There is no vertical tangent here because the undirected limit of does not exist as .
[edit] References
Vertical Tangents and Cusps. Retrieved May 12, 2006.