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Answer, Key Homework 1 David McIntyre 1

This print-out should have 3 questions, check sixteen days.


that it is complete. Multiple-choice questions
may continue on the next column or page: 10. Two chickens will lay thirty-two eggs in
find all choices before making your selection. nine days.
The due time is Central time. Explanation:
This is a quick problem set to get you Basic Concept: The information given
started using this homework server. in the question is the rate of egg production
in one instance and you must make this rate
001 (part 1 of 1) 10 points compatible with another instance. The rate
Needing help, the secretary of the United of egg production is constant. The number of
States Department of Agriculture asked your eggs per chicken per day is a constant.
teacher, If a chicken-and-a-half can lay an Solution: Since it takes a chicken-and-a-half
egg-and-a-half in a day-and-a-half, how many a day-and-a-half to lay an egg-and-a-half, it
days will it take two chickens to lay thirty-two will take one chicken one-and-a-half days to
eggs? lay one egg. Therefore, to lay thirty-two eggs
it will take two chickens twenty-four days.
Alternative Method: Unit analysis is
basic to every physics problem and is central
to this problem. The rate of egg production is
the number of eggs produced per chicken per
day. In the given instance the rate is
Please help your teacher select the correct
answer the secretarys question. {3/2 eggs}
rate =
{3/2 chickens} {3/2 days}
1. Two chickens will lay thirty-two eggs in 2 eggs
twelve days. = . (1)
3 chickens days
2. Two chickens will lay thirty-two eggs in In the requested instance, the number of
twenty-two days. chickens is (2 chickens) and the number of
eggs is (32 eggs). The number of days N is
3. Two chickens will lay thirty-two eggs in to be determined. Therefore in the requested
six days. instance, the rate is
{32 eggs}
4. Two chickens will lay thirty-two eggs in rate = . (2)
twenty-one days. {2 chickens} {N }
The rate is constant, so equating the rates
5. Two chickens will lay thirty-two eggs in Eqs. (1) and (2), we have
eighteen days.
2 eggs 32 eggs
6. Two chickens will lay thirty-two eggs in =
3 chicken days 2 chickens N
fifteen days.
Solving for the number of days N , we have
7. Two chickens will lay thirty-two eggs in 32 eggs 3 chickens days
twenty-four days. correct N =
2 chickens 2 eggs
8. Two chickens will lay thirty-two eggs in = 24 days .
ten days. The correct answer: Two chickens will lay
thirty-two eggs in twenty-four days.
9. Two chickens will lay thirty-two eggs in Note: The early chicken catches the worm.
Answer, Key Homework 1 David McIntyre 2

a good approximation of how many piano


002 (part 1 of 1) 10 points tuners there are in NYC.
Assume: The population of a large city like How many piano tuners are needed? We
New York City is about 4 106 people. There first approximate how many pianos there are
are about 1.54 people per household. Ap- to tune. The population of NYC is about
proximately 1 household in 19.5 has a piano. 4 106 people. There are 1.54 people per
The piano keyboard has about 64 notes (8 oc- household, and about 1 piano per 19.5 house-
taves) with about 2 strings per note. A piano holds. Thus the total number of pianos should
should be tuned once per year (365.25 days). be about:
A piano tuner can tune about 4 pianos per
day. And, finally, piano tuners work 252 days 4 106 people
Npiano =
per year. people
1.54 household 19.5 households
pianos
How many piano tuners are there in New
York City? 133200 pianos
Note: This was one of Prof. Fermis famous Since a piano should be tuned once per
party questions. The question has been used year, and a piano tuner can tune 4 pianos per
by others, namely Prof. Feynman day, NYC needs about
Hint: The original intent of Fermis party
question was to do an order of magnitude
estimate which would give at most the accu- 133200 pianos
racy of one significant figure. Approach the (252 days) (4 pianos/day/piano tuner)
present problem in the following way. 132 piano tuners.
1.) First do an order of magnitude estimate.
2.) Then do a more quantitative calculation Note: The number of keys on a piano key-
using a calculator and pretend that the as- board and the number of strings in a piano
sumed input numbers are precise. were extraneous information.
This calculation is significant since error
analysis rounds off only after a quantitative 003 (part 1 of 1) 10 points
calculation is completed. A 19th century British naturalist with a pen-
3.) After both (1) and (2) have been done, chant for archaic units of measurement de-
proceed to check whether the estimated an- scribed a species of snail crawling at average
swer is in the right ball-park; i.e., in the speed of one furlong per fortnight. (A furlong
right order of magnitude as compared to is one eighth of 1 mile or 220 yards; a yard is 3
your second answer; i.e., the artificial quan- feet or 0.9144 meter; a fortnight is a time in-
titative answer. terval of 14 days or 14 24 hours.) Recently,
4.) Enter your quantitative answer from step a biology student re-measured the snails av-
2. erage speed and reported it as one centimeter
5.) Make the assumption that the capitalistic per minute.
system does not have idle piano tuners or Which of the following is the most likely
physics students. explanation of the difference between the two
Correct answer: 132 . measurements? Hint: Use common sense.
Explanation:
Basic Concept: Order of Magnitude Cal- 1. The student got a much slower species of
culations snail than the one described by the natural-
Solution: To find the approximate number ist.
of piano tuners in NYC, assume that the eco-
nomic laws of supply and demand are in force; 2. Pollution in action: the snails became
that is, if we can find how many piano tuners somewhat slower than they used to be because
are actually needed in NYC, we should have of some environmental toxins.
Answer, Key Homework 1 David McIntyre 3

3. The students snails are crawling at ex-


actly the same snails pace they ever did, but
he reported a slightly different value for their
speed because he rounded it up in different
units. correct

4. Evolution in action: even the snails got


somewhat faster than they used to be.

5. The student has smoked too much weed


and lost all sense of time; his measurements
are garbage.

6. The student got a much faster species of


snail than the one described by the natural-
ist.
Explanation:
Let us convert the archaic units of the
19th century naturalists into cm/minutes
and then compare the two measurements:

v = 1 furlong/fortnight
220 yards
=
14 days
(220)(0.9144) m
=
(14)(24) hours
(220)(0.9144)(100) cm
=
(14)(24)(60) minutes
= 0.9979 cm/min.

Since both the naturalist and the student


rounded off their results (albeit in different
units), it is clear that the two measurements
agree with each other and the snails pace has
not changed at all.

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