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-   -   Math question (https://www.pprune.org/professional-pilot-training-includes-ground-studies/297489-math-question.html)

airman13 2nd November 2007 10:18

So ,john completes 5 tasks in 27 min ,and bob completes the same 5 tasks in 54 min .
This means john is 2 times faster than bob.In this case john will complete 10 tasks in 54 min .So in 54 min the both of them will complete 15 tasks together.easily to see that 5 tasks will be complete in54/3 =18 min.

airman13 2nd November 2007 10:21

the answer above is for pilotmike especially.

Dick Whittingham 2nd November 2007 11:12

This is lovely! To quote Isaac Newton what we have here is not a mathematical problem. The question is, what is the mathematical problem.

So far as I can see, the most logical interpretation of the question is that there exists a standard task T, and on different occasions three diferent teams, A + B, A + C and B + C complete T in different times. From this we have to work out how long each individual would take to complete T, working on his own.

If you accept this as the mathematical problem then pilotmike has the mathematical answer.

Remember that Godel said that in any formal mathematical system there are theorems that are true that cannot be proved within that system.

and vice versa!

Dick

Fg Off Max Stout 2nd November 2007 16:14

I just knocked this off for 'fun' in about 5 mins without reading beyond the first post. I've now read the rest of the threads and seen that (apart from a transcription error on the part of the question writer), my answers match those in post 3. As there seems to be a lot of misunderstanding, and as I have far more important work to be doing which I need an excuse to avoid, here's the solution.

Although it looks like a straightforward 3-variable simultaneous equation, the trap is that you have to realise that you are dealing with reciprocals. If you do not spot this, you blunder down a path where you consider that the time taken for two people to do the work is the sum of the times taken for each individual to do it alone. Clearly not right, as it will always be quicker for two people to work together.

So...

Three people, A, B & C, who each can work at their own particular speed, which we'll call work rates Ra, Rb, and Rc (work done per hour) respectively. The total amount of work to be done, the size of the job, we'll call W (work).

The three lines of data in the original question, we'll refer to as Equation 1, Eq 2 and Eq 3, concerning A&B, A&C, B&C respectively.

Looking at Eq1:

48mins is 4/5 hr. Individual A, working at a work rate of Ra (work/hr), for 4/5 hr, will perform 4/5 Ra units of work. Similarly B will do 4/5 Rb units of work. The total work done by them both together in a fixed amount of time is the sum of the work done by them individually in that amount of time. Hence the work done by A&B is 4/5 Ra + 4/5 Rb. In this amount of time they have completed the job, which we called the unit amount of work, W. This gives us:
Eq1 4/5 Ra + 4/5 Rb = W

Doing this for all three cases gives us:

Eq1 4/5 Ra + 4/5 Rb = W
Eq2 4/3 Ra + 4/3 Rc = W
Eq3 Rb + Rc = W

=>

Eq1 4 Ra + 4 Rb = 5W
Eq2 4 Ra + 4 Rc = 3W
Eq3 Rb + Rc = W

Now solve as a standard 3-variable simultaneous equation for work rates.

Subtract Eq2 from Eq 1 to give Eq4:

Eq1 { 4 Ra + 4 Rb = 5W }
Eq2 - { 4 Ra + 4 Rc = 3W } -
----- -------------------------------
Eq4 { 0 Ra + 4 Rb - 4 Rc = 2W }
----- -------------------------------

Eq4 2 Rb - 2 Rc = W

Add Eq4 to 2 x Eq3 to solve for Rb

Eq4 { 2 Rb - 2 Rc = W }
Eq3 + { 2 Rb + 2 Rc = 2W } +
-----------------------------
{ 4 Rb + 0 Rc = 3W }
-----------------------------

=> Rb = 3/4 W (units of work per hour)

Substitute into Eq3:

3/4 W + Rc = W

=> Rc = 1/4 W

Substitute into Eq1:

=> Ra = 1/2 W

We have now solved for the three individuals work rates. If you use these values in Eq1, Eq 2 & Eq3, they all tally up.

Work rates, R:
Ra = 1/2 W }
Rb = 3/4 W } (units of work done per hour)
Rc = 1/4 W }

To carry out the total work alone, would take an individual... the amount of work, W (units of work) divided by their personal work rate R (units of work done per hour), giving time taken in hours. For the one unit of work, W, the time taken in hours is the reciprocal of the hourly work rate:

Time taken, T:
Ta = 2/1 hrs = 2 hrs = 120 mins
Tb = 4/3 hrs = 1hr 20mins = 80 mins
Tc = 4/1 hrs = 4 hrs = 240 mins

This pretty much matches the textbook answers. I think they have transcibed B and C somewhere.

Additionally you can say that the work rate of the three working together is:

Ra + Rb + Rc = Rabc = 3/2 W

Therefore the time taken would be 2/3 hrs = 40 mins.


Job done. Sorry to be long winded. I don't mean to teach granny to suck eggs but hopefully this eliminates any room for misunderstanding. It was a lot quicker to do the calc than to type this up!

You won't find yourself doing these sort of calculations as a professional pilot, but it is essential that a pilot has an above average working knowledge of maths and good mental arithmetic. :ok:


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