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Showing posts with the label bottle

"Save Your House From Me!"

Okay, I’ll ask three questions, and if you miss one I get your house. Fair enough? Here we go:

1.A clock strikes six in 5 seconds. How long does it take to strike twelve?

2.A bottle and its cork together cost $1.10. The bottle costs a dollar more than the cork. How much does the bottle cost?


3.A train leaves New York for Chicago at 90 mph. At the same time, a bus leaves Chicago for New York at 50 mph. Which is farther from New York when they meet?


"Save Your House From Me!"


You need little common sense in answering above!

Presence of Common Sense in Answers!


What where questions?

1. A clock strikes six in 5 seconds. How long does it take to strike twelve?

A: Not 10 seconds, it takes 11 seconds.

Here, interval between 2 strikes is 1 second i.e. if counter started at first strike, it will count 1 second after second strike, 2 seconds after third strike & so on. 

Hence, 11 seconds needed for strike 12.

2.A bottle and its cork together cost $1.10. The bottle costs a dollar more than the cork. How much does the bottle cost?


A: Not 1 dollar, it would cost $1.05.

If x is cost of cork,
x + (x +1) = 1.10
2x = 0.10
x = 0.05

Hence cost of bottle is $1.05 and cost of cork is $0.05



3.A train leaves New York for Chicago at 90 mph. At the same time, a bus leaves Chicago for New York at 50 mph. Which is farther from New York when they meet?

A: Obviously, when they meet at some point then that point must be at the some distance from New York. Hence, they are at the same distance from the city.


Presence of Common Sense in Answers!

The Story of The Indecisive Rower

A rower rows regularly on a river, from A to B and back. He’s got into the habit of rowing harder when going upstream, so that he goes twice as fast relative to the water as when rowing downstream. 

One day as he’s rowing upstream he passes a floating bottle. He ignores it at first but then gradually grows curious about its contents. After 20 minutes of arguing with himself he stops rowing and drifts for 15 minutes. Then he sets out after the bottle. After some time rowing downstream he changes his mind, turns around, and makes his way upstream again. But his curiosity takes hold once more, and after 10 minutes of rowing upstream he turns and goes after the bottle again. Again he grows ashamed of his childishness and turns around. But after rowing upstream for 5 minutes he can’t stand it any longer, rows downstream, and picks up the bottle 1 kilometer from the point where he’d passed it. 

How fast is the current?

The Story of The Indecisive Rower


That's the speed of water current!

Water Speed in The Story of The Indecisice Rower


What was the story?

Just for a moment let's assume the rower is rowing on a calm lake where water is stationary. Then, the bottle that he saw is also not moving & floating at one point.

In the case, he moves away (upstream in real case) from the bottle & comes back (downstream in real case) again to collect the bottle. He rows away from the bottle for 20 + 10 + 5 = 35 minutes. 

Remember his speed is double when he goes away from bottle than when he is coming towards the bottle. That's why he takes 35 X 2 = 70 minutes to come back at the point where bottle is floating.

Inside The Story of The Indecisice Rower

Moreover, he drifts for 15 minutes in real case; for that let's assume he sits motionless for 15 minutes (in our assumed lake case) at some point in between.

So after leaving the bottle, he returns to the bottle after 35 + 15 + 70 = 120 minutes.

Now, assume this water in the lake is moving and this bottle is 'displaced' by 1 KM away from it's original position in 120 minutes. 

Inside The Story of The Indecisice Rower

That means, the water is moving at the speed of 1 km / 120 minutes. That is the speed of water current is 1/2 kmph.  

A Mathematical Buy!

In a classic wine shop in Flobecq, Belgium, list of three most popular wines are:

- The cost of 1 French wine bottle: 500$
- The cost of 1 German wine bottle: 100$
- The cost of 20 Dutch wine bottles: 100$


Homer Simpson entered the wine shop and he needs to buy


- All three types of wine shop.
- Needs to buy Dutch wine bottles in multiple of 20.
- Need to buy 100 wine bottles


Simpson has only 10000$. How many wine bottle(s) of each type, Simpson must buy? 


A Mathematical Shopping Challenge!

Simpson must buy.......Read More.... 

Source 
 

A Buy To Be Mathematical...


What was needed to buy?

Let's recollect the data where cost of each kind of wine bottle is listed.

- The cost of 1 French wine bottle: 500$
- The cost of 1 German wine bottle: 100$
- The cost of 20 Dutch wine bottles: 100$ (Cost of 1 bottle = 5$)

 

Now let F be the number of French bottle, G be the number of German bottles and D be the number of Dutch bottle that Simpson should buy.

F + G + D = 100

G = 100 - F - D   .....(1)

Total cost of all bottle must be $10000.

500F + 100G + 5D = 10000

Substituting (1) in above,

500F + 100(100 - F - D) + 5D = 10000

500F + 10000 - 100F - 100D + 5D = 10000

400F - 95D = 0

400F = 95D 
 
80F = 19D

D/F = 80/19

Possible values of D and F are 80 and 19 respectively.

From (1),

G = 100 - 19 - 80 =  1.

Let's verify if all these fits in his budget or not.  

19 French wine bottles would cost 19 x 500 = 9500, 1 German wine would cost = 1 x 100 = 100 and 80 Dutch wine bottles would cost 80 x 5 = 400. Remember we have got number of Dutch bottles in multiple of 20. Hence total cost = 9500 + 100 + 400 = 10000.

Hence with $10000, Simpson should buy 19 French, 1 German and 80 Dutch wine bottles if conditions of buying 100 bottles & Dutch bottles in multiple of 20 are applied.   

A mathematical challenge accepted

 

Test Of Poison

You are the ruler of a medieval empire and you are about to have a celebration tomorrow. The celebration is the most important party you have ever hosted. You've got 1000 bottles of wine you were planning to open for the celebration, but you find out that one of them is poisoned.

The poison exhibits no symptoms until death. Death occurs within ten to twenty hours after consuming even the minutest amount of poison.

You have over a thousand slaves at your disposal and just under 24 hours to determine which single bottle is poisoned.

You have a handful of prisoners about to be executed, and it would mar your celebration to have anyone else killed.

What is the smallest number of prisoners you must have to drink from the bottles to be absolutely sure to find the poisoned bottle within 24 hours? 


Detecting the poisonous bottle

Here is the test designed for it! 

Source 


Test To Detect The Poison


Here is the challenge for us! 

Here binary number system can come to rescue. Just for a  moment, let's assume there are 15 bottles. Now let's number the bottles from 1 to 15. To test these 15 bottles we need 4 prisoners as below. Let's number the prisoners from in descending 4 to 1.

Detection of poisonous bottle

Wherever 1 is written for the particular bottle number, that bottle should be given to particular prisoner. Otherwise should not.

So for the specific bottle with unique number a specific combination of prisoners (they are bits here) would be formed. 


For example, if bottle labeled as 11 has a poison then prisoner no. 4,2,1 would die. In other words, if prisoner 4 & 2 die then the bottle no. 10 had poison.

For 16th bottle we would have needed 1 more prisoner.

In similar way, to test 1000 bottles, we need 10 prisoners (2^10=1024). Depending on what combination of prisoner die we can determine which bottle had poison. If prisoners numbered from 10 to 1 & if prisoner 10,8,6,3 & 2 die then bottle no.678 (binary -
1010100110) must had poison. Since the poison takes some time to take effect, even if prisoners taste this bottle, we still would have time to test rest of all bottles in given binary pattern. 

  Poisonous Bottle

In case there were 1025 bottle, we would have needed 11 prisoners.

 
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