how does the author get this answer

allegansveritatem

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The Problem: A swimmer takes 2 hours to swim 10 miles with the current. It takes him/her 4 hours to swim the same distance back against the current. How fast is the current.

I worked it out thus:

2x + 2y = 10
4x - 4y = 10

I multiplied the top equation by 2:

4x + 4y =20
4x - 4y = 10

this led to:

8x= 30, x = 15/4

I put this into the first equation:

2(15/4) + 2y = 10 and multiplied this by 2:

4(15/4) + 4y = 20 which goes to:

15 + 4Y = 20 and eventuates in:

y = 5/4

So the current comes to 5/4 miles. I can't get around this result. but my author, Robert Blixer, gives 15/8 or 1 7/8 as the correct answer. How did he get this? What am I doing wrong here?

I include here a copy of the problem:swimmer problem.jpg
 
The Problem: A swimmer takes 2 hours to swim 10 miles with the current. It takes him/her 4 hours to swim the same distance back against the current. How fast is the current.

I worked it out thus:

2x + 2y = 10
4x - 4y = 10


I multiplied the top equation by 2:

4x + 4y =20
4x - 4y = 10

this led to:

8x= 30, x = 15/4

I put this into the first equation:

2(15/4) + 2y = 10 and multiplied this by 2:

4(15/4) + 4y = 20 which goes to:

15 + 4Y = 20 and eventuates in:

y = 5/4

So the current comes to 5/4 miles. I can't get around this result. but my author, Robert Blixer, gives 15/8 or 1 7/8 as the correct answer. How did he get this? What am I doing wrong here?

I include here a copy of the problem:View attachment 9408
That is incorrect.

How did you derive those?

Let

the speed of the swimmer = s

the speed of the current = c

then:

10/(s+c) = 2 ................................eqn # 1

and

10/(s - c) = 2*4................................eqn # 2

Now continue......

The answer in the book is correct.
 
Your "4 hours" should be 8 hours: author specified 4 times longer.
1 7/8 is correct.
Good news: you'd be correct IF 4 hours :rolleyes:

Oh boy! I must have read that problem 4 times and didn't catch that! haha. Well, hopefully, that's one fast one that won't be pulled on me successfully again. Thanks for pointing it out.
 
That is incorrect.

How did you derive those?

Let

the speed of the swimmer = s

the speed of the current = c

then:

10/(s+c) = 2 ................................eqn # 1

and

10/(s - c) = 2*4................................eqn # 2

Now continue......

The answer in the book is correct.

yes, that is the procedure I followed...but no amount of correct procedure will save a bad reading of the problem. Well, wait til next time...as we Cub fans used to say in Chicago after every losing season. But, guess what? There came a time when they won the World Series! So, from that, I take hope.
 
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