Question
No. 6 is the stumbling block;
No winners this month
Many of the entries
in the January Math Puzzler competition got five of six answers
correct. But, the answer to Question No. 6 eluded everyone.
The most common
answer was 9 hours. And, it seemed to be the "logical"
answer. But, Mr. Math Puzzler had a different idea of what
"positioned in a straight line" meant.
He was able to
get the satellites re-aligned along his straight line in half
the time, or 4 1/2 hours.
Many of you thought
of the "straight line" as a radius from the Earth
to the outer edge of the orbits. That's the way the satellites
showed in the illustration for the question.
But, Mr. Puzzler's
"straight line" was a full diameter of the orbits,
running on both sides of the earth. The illustration for the
answer to Question No. 6 shows how that works.
Question No. 6
was the only one where all your answers were incorrect. For
many of you, the other answers seemed to come easy - although
Mr. Math Puzzler thought he was making the questions very
challenging. .
For some tips
by Mr. Math Puzzler on how to increase your chances of getting
future answers right, see the February Math Puzzler story.
(To get there quickly, just click here
after you review the January answers that follow.)
Answers
to January, 2001, Math Puzzlers
1. The clerk misunderstood
the order for rope. He reversed the feet and inches and the
customer got only 30% of what she ordered. What was the length
of rope really ordered?
Answer: 9 ft, 2 inches
Explanation:
There's a way to solve this with algebraic formulas. But,
this is also one where starting with an "educated guess"
can put you on the road to the right answer. One way to focus
your guess is to assume the rope won't be higher than 11 feet.
That's because the "reversed" number can't have
an inch figure over 11.
So, start with
11 feet, 10 inches and work down. Eleven feet, 10 inches,
when reversed comes out 10 feet, 11 inches. That doesn't fit
the 30% comparison. By working this way, you'll eventually
arrive at 9 ft, 2 in. A lot of you got there on this question.
2. Jerry went
shopping. He spent half of what he had plus $5 for a shirt.
Then, he spent half of what was left plus $5 for a mystery
novel. Finally, he spent half of what was left plus $5 for
stationery. Then, Jerry had nothing left. How much did he
start with?
Answer: $70
Explanation:
To get this correct answer takes a number of algebra steps.
But, many of you found the correct answers. We start with
X being the final answer.
3. There was
a contest to guess how many beans were in a jar. Herb was
off by 6, Sally was off by 5, James was off by 4 and Lucy
was off by 3. Susie was correct. One guessed 19, one guessed
22, one guessed 29, one guessed 25 and one guessed 30. What
was the right answer?
Answer: 25 beans
Explanation:
This is another answer that can be found with "educated"
trial and error. Arrange people by order, such as Herb, off
6; Sally, off 5; James, off 4, Lucy, off 3, and Susie, off
0. Then, starting with Herb, figure out which numbers off
by 6. The only combination is 19 and 25. Then, check out Sally's
off 5 number and you see 30 is 5 off of 25. Using 25 as the
correct answer, James' off 4 number is 29 and Lucy's off 3
number is 22.
4. Jim climbed
a rock wall at half a mile per hour and descended twice as
fast. The trip took 12 hours. How far was it to the top?
Answer: 4 miles
Explanation:
You can see that if going up takes twice as long as going
down. That means two-thirds of total 12-hour round trip is
(or 8 hours) is spent going up and one-third (or 4 hours)
in coming down. You know you made progress at a half-mile
per hour going up so the answer is 4 miles.
5. Fifteen knights
were invited to a sumptuous meal at the castle. Before sitting
down, each of the 15 knights shook hands with each of the
other knights. How many hand shakes were needed?
Answer: 105
Explanation:
The answer is arrived at by figuring a progression of handshakes.
Knight No. 1 needs to shake hands with the other 14 knights.
But, Knight No. 2 only requires 13 new handshakes because
his shake with Knight No. 1 is already accounted for. Knight
No. 3 only needs 12 new shakes, because his handshakes with
Knights No. 1 and No. 2 are accounted for in those knights'
shake totals. This continues until Knight No. 15 has no new
handshakes because his shaking is accounted in the other 14
totals. And 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, and
1 new handshakes adds up to 105.
6. Different things
orbit the earth at different speeds and distances. For example,
satellites and space instruments released by the space shuttle
are only several hundred miles away from earth, while communication
satellites circle at a distance of about 22,300 miles.
In this puzzle,
Satellite X-1 orbits our planet once every nine hours, Satellite
Beta once every 4 1/2 hours and Satellite Parking once every
three hours. At time zero, the satellites are positioned in
a straight line. How long will it take for all three objects
to position themselves again in a straight line?
Illustration A
Answer:
4 1/2 hours
Explanation:
Compare the original question illustration (A) with the answer
illustration (B).
Illustration B
If you ran
the satellites around until they lined up like Illustration
A, the lapsed time would be 9 hours. But, if you consider
alignment along the whole diameter it would take only 4 1/2
hours. That's because Satellite X-1 only needs to make a half-orbit
to get aligned to Satellite Beta, which makes a whole orbit
in that time. Then, Satellite Parking aligns at the bottom
of the orbit (with Parking) by going around 1 1/2 times in
its 4 1/2 hours.