What do La Niña and Mathematical Limits Have in Common?

…To the Best of Mike’s Knowledge?

Top prize goes to the first person who guessed that the only common ground is that this one blog post publicizes two articles at once.

La Niña’s Effects

My article in a now-defunct web site, “3 World Changing Effects of La Niña“, tells how La Niña continues to dance with El Niño.

"The Peruvian Coast, the Pacific Ocean" by lawtonjm
“The Peruvian Coast, the Pacific Ocean” by lawtonjm

This sets up a cycle of changing weather patterns based on the temperature of a Pacific Ocean current. My article reports on three of its far-reaching effects.

Can We Find Limits for Mathematical Functions?

My Decoded Science article, “How to Find Limits of Mathematical Functions“, was published late last night.
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"The Need for Limits" by Mike DeHaan
“The Need for Limits” by Mike DeHaan

Some mathematical functions are undefined at certain points, such as when dividing by zero. Here’s how to seek the limit of the function’s value near that difficult point.

Other Promotional Articles at my Blog of Writing

As usual, I promoted these two articles in my DeHaan Blog of Writing.

The “The Troubled Dance of La Niña” entry publicizes my article on La Niña. It has an important writing tip regarding special characters in the titles of Web-based articles.

Since I created a couple of images for the math article, I published them first in “My Images for my Limits at Decoded Science“. For once this blog post has a variety of writing tips, rather than just one.