To investigate the convergence of a series I have to solve the folliwing limit:
\begin{equation} \lim\limits_{x\rightarrow\infty} \frac{(x^2-1) \sqrt{x + 2}-x^2\sqrt{x+1}}{x\sqrt{x + 1}} \end{equation}
It should be $\frac{1}{2}$ but i can't quite seem to get to that solution. I've tried to factor the square root out of the quotient which was:
\begin{equation} \lim\limits_{x\rightarrow\infty} \sqrt{\frac{((x^2-1) \sqrt{x + 2}-x^2\sqrt{x+1})^2}{x^2(x + 1)}} \end{equation}
Then i worked out the square in the numerator which was:
\begin{equation} (x^2-1)^2 (x + 2)-2x^2(x^2-1)\sqrt{x+1}\sqrt{x+2}+x^4(x+1) \end{equation}
I could then factor the terms and take and divide the numerator with the (x+1) from the denominator. Then i could expand the terms in the numerator wich became:
\begin{equation} \lim\limits_{x\rightarrow\infty}\sqrt{\frac{(x^4+x^3-3x^2-x+2)-\sqrt{16x^8+32x^7-12x^6-20x^5+8x^4}+x^4}{x^2}} \end{equation}
Now i can take the $16x^8$ out of the root and then i then looked at the terms with the highest exponent so i had:
\begin{equation} \lim\limits_{x\rightarrow\infty}\sqrt{\frac{x^4-4x^4+x^4}{x^2}} =\lim\limits_{x\rightarrow\infty}\sqrt{\frac{-2x^2}{x^2}} \end{equation}
Which could only be solved with complex numbers, so i should be wrong somewhere in my calculations, since i know that i should get $\frac{1}{2}$. I also checked my sollution with WolframAlpha which also gave $\frac{1}{2}$ so I know that the sollution i have is correct.
Would anyone know where i was wrong or how i could better solve it?