It could be that the headlamps are burned out or it could also be that the high beam switch has failed.
The contacts in the dimmer switch, on the steering column, may be burned from the headlamps being on all the time. The switch has to be replaced. First check the low beam lamp filaments with an ohm/multimeter for continuity.
As Infinity means to be without end, adding infinity to infinity to infinity would not change that. Adding infinity to an infinity would be Infinity itself. However, this could change if other mathematical processes are done. ================================== When real math people run into the thing we call "infinity", they call it "undefined". It's not a number, and it doesn't participate in the operations of arithmetic like numbers do. So technically, this question describes a process that doesn't exist in math. A lot like asking "What is cow add stick add temperature add democracy ?"
When headlamps on the Yamaha Mio are out, they may have burned out and need to be replaced. The Mio may also have bad wiring or bad fuses.
Infinity and negative infinity are not "numbers". Depending on the context you could express it as (-1)/0, though.
First off, infinity is not a number in conventional mathematics. In Calculus, you can work with infinity through the language of limits. It is important to note that when we use the shorthand: ∞/∞ What we are REALLY saying is "the limit of a function which diverges to infinity divided by the limit of a function which diverges to infinity". We are not actually saying "infinity divided by infinity". Now that THAT is out of the way, we can get to the answer. ∞/∞ is of indeterminate form, meaning that the division could converge to 0, it could converge to 1, it could converge to an arbitrary constant, or it could diverge to infinity. In order to figure out which of these cases is true, you need to apply L'Hospital's rule, by taking the derivative of the numerator and the denominator (separately).
infinity could be anything or nothing at all you pretty much cant explain it.
As a guess both low beams are burnt out The daytime running and high beams are the same light filament. Or the fuse or the relay for the low beams.
Infinity itself isn't a number in the conventional sence therefore not only is there everything before it there is nothing Ie. If 10,000 were the value of infinity I could add 1 to it and that would become infinity so unless somebody finds the point at which numbers stop ascending there will never be a value before infinity, find ding that point is impossible because as I have said before if you pick a number you can always add 1 to it.
It could be a bad dimmer switch, or the low beam elements inside the dual headlight bulb could be burned out.
I would suspect the dimmer switch. But could be a bad wire/short.
the low beam part of the bulb could be bad.
There are two filaments in each bulb, one for low and one for high beam. In all likelihood, the filaments for low beams are both burned out. Because of the lighting patterns of composite headlamps, you could drive for a long time and not realize that you have only one headlamp. The difference between one headlamp and no headlamps is a lot greater than the difference between two and one. Change the bulbs. My money is riding on that being your problem. --Ken