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-   -   Rate - time - distance problem (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/showthread.php?t=47690)

  • Dec 10, 2006, 10:04 AM
    hgogri
    Rate - time - distance problem
    A state police officer is chasing a car he believes is speeding. The officer is traveling at 70mph to try and catch up with the car. But he can't say later that the other car was going 70mph because the driver could ask, "If we were going the same speed, how did you catch up? Obviously I was going slower than you. I wasn't speeding." The officer sees the driver pass a mile marker, one-fourth of a mile ahead. From the marker, it takes the officer five minutes (1/12 of an hour) to catch up. How fast was the driver going


    How do I solve this difficult problem??
  • Dec 10, 2006, 03:11 PM
    Capuchin
    Okay, first ignore the fact that the officer is going at 70mph.

    Pretend that the officer is going some fixed speed, and the car he is chasing isn't moving at all. Could you now work out the speed the officer is going?

    How does this answer relate to the original problem? What is the answer to your original problem? :)

    Let me know if this helped -- :)
  • Sep 16, 2010, 01:54 PM
    BengalsBucks710
    Pull out the radar gun man
  • Sep 16, 2010, 03:23 PM
    galactus

    Subtract the rates of the speeder and the cop.

    This difference takes 5 minutes to cover 1/4 mile.

    Since the cop is going 70, then the difference in the rates is r-70.

    Since d=rt, we have



    solve for r.
  • Sep 17, 2010, 08:19 AM
    Unknown008

    THREAD CLOSED BECAUSE IT WAS REVIVED. Thanks.

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