Solve Distance Problem: Boy Riding Bicycle for 30km

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AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a distance problem involving a boy riding a bicycle 30 km to a town, where he rests for half an hour after traveling 10 km and then increases his speed by 2 km/h for the remaining distance. Participants clarify the setup of the equations used to solve the problem, highlighting discrepancies in how the initial 10 km was treated. The correct formulation involves considering the total time for the trip, including rest and increased speed, leading to a quadratic equation that yields a positive speed solution of 8 km/h. The conversation also touches on the importance of accurately interpreting the problem statement and correctly applying mathematical principles. Ultimately, the solution confirms the boy's speed as 8 km/h.
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Homework Statement


This problem has already been solved but i got a quite few clarifications:
http://www.algebra.com/algebra/homework/word/travel/Travel_Word_Problems.faq.question.493396.html

"a boy on his bicycle intends to arrive at a certain time to a town that is 30 km away from his home .after riding 10 km, he rested for half an hour and as a result he was obliged to ride the rest of the trip 2km/hr faster ."

Homework Equations


v = d/t
t = d/v

The Attempt at a Solution


Why did he disregard the 10km?
i think the formula should've of look like this:
\frac{30}{s}=\frac{10}{s}+0.5+\frac{20}{s+2}
(total time riding on original speed for the whole trip) = (time riding on original speed (for 10km))+(time rested)+(faster velocity on the rest (for 20km))

the formula he used:
\frac{30}{s}=\frac{30}{s+2}+0.5
 
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He has to go 20km in the time remaining after traveling 10km at the slow speed, and waiting half an hour.

The time remaining is ##20/s = 0.5 + 20/(s+2)## ... agreeing with your formulation.

##40(s+2) = (s+2)s + 40s##

rearranging:
##s^2+2s-80=0##

by quadratic equation:
##s \in \{ 10,-8 \}##

possible answers are 10hr and -8hr ... pick the positive one.
This is the same answer.

So your question is, "how did he know that his version would be correct?"
Try plotting the velocity-time graph.
 
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The solutions to the quadratic equation are +8 and -10.
The solution for the problem is then 8km/h.

In the link given he is solving a different problem. I suppose he did not read the problem carefully.
 
Did I set up the quadratic incorrectly ...

the discriminant is 324
so ##s =\frac{1}{2}(-2\pm\sqrt{324}=1\pm 9## ... Oh I see: I misplaced a minus sign!
<mumble mumble grzzl>
... time for bed!
 
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