If 3 cats eat 3 mice in 3 minutes; how many cats for 100 mice in 100 minutes?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around a mathematical problem involving the rate at which cats can eat mice, specifically asking how many cats are needed to eat 100 mice in 100 minutes. The scope includes mathematical reasoning, conceptual exploration, and humorous commentary on the practicality of the scenario.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Mathematical reasoning
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that since it takes 3 cats 3 minutes to eat 3 mice, it would take 3 cats to eat 100 mice in 100 minutes, assuming they can eat continuously at that rate.
  • Others argue that the problem is more complex than it appears, suggesting that real-life factors such as a cat's capacity to eat, potential vomiting, and the dynamics of sharing food complicate the scenario.
  • A participant mentions that if 3 cats eat 99 mice in 99 minutes, only one cat would be left to eat the last mouse, which would not be possible within the remaining minute, implying that 4 or more cats would be necessary.
  • Some humorously suggest that the question is a trick or a brain teaser, with one participant noting that it might be intended for a lighthearted setting.
  • There are discussions about the implications of using larger cats, like lions, which could theoretically handle the task differently than house cats.
  • Several participants highlight the unrealistic nature of the problem, emphasizing the need for additional parameters to make it applicable to real-life situations.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on the number of cats needed, with multiple competing views remaining. Some insist on 3 cats, while others argue for 4 or more based on different interpretations of the problem.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include assumptions about the cats' eating rates, the impact of fullness on their eating speed, and the practicalities of sharing food. The discussion also touches on the ambiguity of the problem's wording and its applicability to real-world scenarios.

Who May Find This Useful

Readers interested in mathematical puzzles, humorous explorations of logic, or discussions on the intersection of theoretical problems and practical realities may find this thread engaging.

Horror Business
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i know this seems simple, and perhaps it's a trick, but I'm confused! is the answer 100?
 
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well, let's see, it seems it takes each cat three minutes to eat a mouse...

must be a trick, my cat can't finish a mouse in less than 5 minutes... :smile:
 
Horror Business said:
i know this seems simple, and perhaps it's a trick, but I'm confused! is the answer 100?

No it's not. The cats are all eating at the same time, aren't they ? Just picture a row of cats eating mice. They all start at the same time, and finish at the same time. How much time has elapsed ?
 
Horror Business said:
i know this seems simple, and perhaps it's a trick, but I'm confused! is the answer 100?

3 minutes.
 
how many mice can one cat eat in 100 minutes? 1 cat eats 100/3 mice. 100mice/(100/3micepercat)=3cats
 
tribdog said:
how many mice can one cat eat in 100 minutes? 1 cat eats 100/3 mice. 100mice/(100/3micepercat)=3cats

Well, that depends on if it still counts if a cat vomits up previous mice and continues eating, or if you have to factor in cat stomach volume, or how much time is lost to vomiting up previously eaten mice.
 
I didn't think of the cat vomiting.
I know I could eat you all day and have no problem whatsoever.
 
tribdog said:
I didn't think of the cat vomiting.

I doubt the author of the original question considered it either. It's a good proof of how out of touch mathematicians are with reality. :biggrin: They think just because 3 cats can eat 3 mice in 3 minutes, those same cats can just keep eating at the same rate and finish off 100 mice in 100 minutes. But, that's 33 1/3 mice per cat in 100 minutes, so it raises a lot of problems in reality. 33 1/3 mice is a lot of mice for a cat. You'll definitely be finding lots of vomited mouse bits on the carpet if the cat tries to eat that many mice. And, how do they work out that 1/3 mouse each? If they are fighting over the last mouse, it might take a long longer to eat that one. Plus, once the cat is full, they probably won't be very fast at chasing mice, they will go take a nap for a hour or so, during which time the mice could be running across their tails and they still wouldn't get up and chase them. And even if they kept eating (more typical of a dog than a cat though), they'd get slower and slower as they got fuller, playing with their food more before eating it. You need to factor in the changing rate of eating with fullness. See, this is an amazingly complex problem in reality, but I'm sure some math teaching writing the question wasn't aware of that :biggrin:

(This is why I used to score really horribly on multiple choice exams. :-p)
 
i think the problem was more focussed on finding out whether a person can spot the mathematical answer for it, and not if it is applicable in real life or not.

anycase, if u try to apply it in reality, then u will have to specify,
the cat,
the exact volume of its stomach,
the no. of days for which it was starving to prepare for such an event,
the amount of body fat stored in the cat,
general inclinatio0n of the cat towards eating, and mice particularly.
apart from that, the general conditions of temprature, humidity, and other factors, which will play a role in the cat getting tired while eating, and thus affecting its speed.

and a very important thing which mised out, is the mice, u will have to specify the mice which are being eaten by the cats, the smaller the mice, the faster and more in no. can be eaten by the cats.

after considering all this, i came up with an equation, but it was way too complicated for me to understand, forget about explaining it to you all.
[ just kidding :) ]


but still i think that it possible for three extremely large cats,( maybe, lions) to eat 33 1/3 mice without vomiting.

so, it was not such an unrealistic problem after all.
 
  • #10
vikasj007 said:
but still i think that it possible for three extremely large cats,( maybe, lions) to eat 33 1/3 mice without vomiting.

so, it was not such an unrealistic problem after all.

Ah, you've beat me at my own game...but of course, cat is a very generic term and I was foolishly assuming a house cat. 33 1/3 mice in 100 minutes would be no problem at all for a large cat like a lion or tiger, at least assuming they aren't ob/ob mice (those are the ones with a genetic mutation that allows them to get VERY fat).
 
  • #11
The question is How many cats?
 
  • #12
Highlight:
It takes a cat three minutes to eat one mouse, 100 mice is equivlent to 300 minutes. So, we must divide 300 by a number to get 100 minutes, that number is three. Three cats.
 
  • #13
well, if you are trying to solve this problem in purely mathematical terms, then the answer is simply 3 cats.

although i don't think that this problem can be easily applied to real life situations as they would involve far too many parameters.
 
  • #14
33.333... cats
 
  • #15
Four or more Cats
3 cats would eat 99 mice in 99 minutes.
Only one cat would be able to get the the last one and would not be able to eat it within the remaining one minute.

So it would take 4 or more cats to eat 100 mice "in" (within) 100 minutes.

RB :wink:
 
  • #16
Based on the data it appears that it takes a single cat 3 minutes to eat a mouse

At that rate a single cat could eat 33.333… mice in 100 minutes

So 3 cats could eat 3 times as much as one cat or 100 mice in 100 minutes.

So I don't see why the answer wouldn't be just 3 cats.

This assumes they can eat continuously at that rate and share at least one mouse as a meal. It also assumes that the don't spend any time hunting for, or playing with, their food. Very unrealistic. :biggrin:

The brain teaser is from the way the question is worded. If it takes 3 cats 3 minutes to eat 3 mice, the first instinct is to say that it will take 100 cats 100 minutes to eat 100 mice. This brain teaser is probably meant to be told in a bar as a joke around drunkards. :wink:
 
  • #17
Hmm, I have 3 cats handy. Does anyone have 100 mice I can 'borrow'? My cats are rather incompetent mousers though, I may have to tie up the mice (blindfold them as well for humane reasons).
 
  • #18
RandallB said:
Four or more Cats
3 cats would eat 99 mice in 99 minutes.
Only one cat would be able to get the the last one and would not be able to eat it within the remaining one minute.

So it would take 4 or more cats to eat 100 mice "in" (within) 100 minutes.

RB :wink:

Well, after 99 mice, the cats won't be so hungry, and will peacefully share the last one.
So, its going to take only 3 cats to do the job :-)
 
  • #19
And it helps if the last mouse is already cut into thirds. :biggrin:
 
  • #20
Rogerio said:
Well, after 99 mice, the cats won't be so hungry, and will peacefully share the last one.
So, its going to take only 3 cats to do the job :-)

Well I figure it will take 3 cats about 5 minutes just to agree to share and even more time to agree on making a fair split. So the best chance is if the big cat get the last mouse. And after 33 mice they will all be large kittys. And even with there best chance it will still take 102 minutes to do the job.
So with a 100 minute dead line I'd need 4 cats.

But I agree using 4 cats to do the job in 75 minutes - that would be "within" 100 minutes - but not really "IN" 100 minutes. ... What to DO to solve??

---- Let's review ---
In our special or general relativity view of the problem 3 cats would do.
BUT down on the quantum level where Cats only come in whole cats
And mice are eaten only in whole mice.
We only see a statistical probability of how many Mice are eaten at a given defined time. Or a statistical probability of the time when exactly 100 mice will be eaten.

So far sending cats around a Cat Accelerator into a Cat Collider has not generated any ¾ Cat or 1/4 Cat sized elements. And even if it did - they probable would not BE cats and may not be able to eat mice.

Just a part of the problem and conflict between GR and Quantum Theory.

There is only one thing to do - we need we need higher level math here.
Any body know some people on String Theory (String preferred over M).
They may be able to help us towards a unified theory and solution.!

Ya Think. :biggrin:

RB
 
  • #21
This probably isn't correct, but it's worth a shot:

I simple solved this equation:

3/3/3 = x/100/100

.333 = x/10000

And I simple got 3334 (it would, of course, round up) ^_^
 
  • #22
phreak said:
And I simple got 3334

I missed your units there - is that in Cat Strings or Cat Tails?
Are you using String theory -- Or M Theory
 
  • #23
Or are those Schrödinger's cats ?
 
  • #24
Gokul43201 said:
Or are those Schrödinger's cats ?
I hope alive they don't eat so well when they're dead.
 
  • #25
easy. 3 minutes:smile:
 
  • #26
If a chicken and a half can lay an egg and a half in a day and a half, then how long will it take a cockroach to kick all of the seeds out of a cucumber?
 
  • #27
RandallB said:
Are you using String theory
String theory doesn't really work with cats - they just run around in circles playing with any bits of string they find, a complete waste of time without producing any productive result.

On second thoughts ...
 
  • #28
All your highfalutin math is nice, but it's obvious nonna you've been in the field. You give me two cats, a half pound o' catnip, a blender, a vacuum with a reverse setting and a six foot to a side cube, and those cats'll polish off the mice in a half hour tops.
 
  • #29
Office_Shredder said:
but it's obvious nonna you've been in the field. You give me two cats, a half pound o' catnip, a blender, a vacuum with a reverse setting and a six foot to a side cube, and those cats'll polish off the mice in a half hour tops.

You're thinking of rabbits

wallace-and-gromit-curse-of-the-wererabbit-2.jpg
 
  • #30
According to the question,we can infer that 3 cats eat 1 mice in 1 minutes

so,3 cats eat 100 mice in 100 minutes

the answer is 3 cats.
 

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