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15:15
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A: Calculate the following limit is $1$.

gt6989bYou have $$ \frac{1}{2^m m^{3/2}} \approx \frac{1}{n}, $$ or equivalently, $$ 2^m m^{3/2} \approx n $$ and taking logs, $$ m + \frac{3}{2} \log m \approx \log n $$ So $$ \frac{n}{\log n} \approx \frac{2^m m^{3/2}}{m + \frac{3}{2} \log m} $$

Sorry but could you check my question again? I edited it just before you answer.
@kayak same idea, seems like a bug of a sorts...
I got to your final line. But how does that imply the answer of my question?
@kayak if you know what $n/\lg n$ is, can you compute $2^m \ln n/n$?
From your final line, $$ \lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{2^{m(n)}\log n}{n}=\lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{m+\frac{3}{2}\log m}{m^{3/2}}. $$ Then it converges to 0. So this is not what I want to get.
15:15
@kayak my point exactly, hence the line seems like a bug of sorts in my earlier comment...
Hi.
Seems like a bug of sorts?
What do you mean?
Perhaps an error in the problem statement? Looks like the limit is 0, not 1...
Ahhh
Please say you are sure.
(lol)
Then
how did you get the first line of your answer?
It seems clear but I want to see the details.

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