Respuesta :

Hello from MrBillDoesMath!

Answer:

5

Discussion:

Consider the expansion of e^x:

e^x = 1 + x + x^2/2 + x^3/6 +......            =>      replace x by 5t

e^(5t) = 1 + (5t)  + (5t)^2/2 + ....              =>      subtract 1 from both sides

e^(5t) - 1 = (5t) + (5t)^2/2+....                  =>      divide both sides by t

(e^(5t) -1)/ t = 5 + (25/2)  t +....

so as t ends to 0  the quotient tends to    

5 + (25/2)0 + (other terms) *0   ->   5

Thank you,

MrB