Calculating Distance Traveled by a Dog Between Two Walking Owners

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The discussion revolves around calculating the distance a dog travels while its two owners walk toward each other from a distance of 10 meters. The owners walk at a combined speed of 2.6 m/s, while the dog runs at 3.0 m/s. The time taken for the owners to meet is calculated as 10/2.6 seconds, leading to a distance of 11.5 meters for the dog. The discrepancy with the book's answer of 11 meters is noted, with suggestions that the book may have simplified the problem. The participants express frustration and seek clarification on the correct methodology for solving the problem.
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Hi everybody. I haven't been in school a few years, and its second week into physics. I have what the book describes as the answer, and through several methods seem to come .5m away from the stated answer...I don't know if they just simplify it or not.

Homework Statement


A dog runs back and forth between its two owners, who are walking toward one another. The dog starts running when the owners are 10m apart. If the dog runs with a speed of 3.0 m/s, and the owners walk with a speed of 1.3 m/s, how far has the dog traveled when the owners meet?


Homework Equations


limit of change in x / change in t

The Attempt at a Solution


From as far as I can see, the owners are covering 2.6 m/s on a 10ft gap, while the dog's traveling of 3.0m/s is being hastened as a limit from 10 to 0. I don't know how to use latex yet, but I took the limit of (3/2.6)x t, where t is 10. the answer I receive is 11.5m or 150/13, but the book puts the answer as 11m. I am frustrated by now and just want to bs some attribution to the dog not starting at the side of an owner, accounting for the .5 m, but I offer this to anyone who could give me a better explanation.
 
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I'm also getting 11.5m . It seems like you didn't use limits, but just regular distance = speed * time, which is fine.

The time when the owners meet is t=(10/2.6). So the distance the dog traveled in that time is 3*t which is 11.5m.

Does the problem ask you to use limits?
 
no it doesn't. i can understand the distance part, i.e. the dog is allowed travel of 3 m/s during the time frame the owners travel (10/2.6). I went over the problem with a kid at the tutoring site at our school, we all get the same answer. I'll ask the teacher, he might have a solutions manual. If there is a good reason, I'll update. thanks!
 
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