Solving an Irregular Clock: No Continuous 576 Minutes

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around creating a clock that runs irregularly yet shows no continuous 576 minutes within a 24-hour period. Participants suggest dividing the 1440 minutes into intervals where the clock runs faster in some intervals and slower in others, maintaining an overall balance. The challenge lies in ensuring that the clock never displays a continuous 576 minutes while still completing the full 24 hours without gaining or losing time. The conversation touches on mathematical concepts like functions and the intermediate value theorem to explore potential solutions. Ultimately, the goal is to devise a method that adheres to these constraints effectively.
Jenny Physics
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Homework Statement


A clock runs irregularly but after 24 hours it has neither gained nor lost overall.
Find a way the clock can run irregularly such that there is no continuous 576 minutes during which the clock shows that 576 minutes have passed.

Homework Equations


24 hours = 1440 minutes and ##576=\frac{2}{5}1440##.

The Attempt at a Solution



The likely idea is to divide the 24 hours/1440 minutes in a number of intervals and have the clock run faster in odd intervals (say running one hour in 30 minutes), then slower in even intervals (say running one hour in 90 minutes) so that overall it still runs 1440 minutes. I can't get the numbers to work though for 576 minutes.
 
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Jenny Physics said:

Homework Statement


A clock runs irregularly but after 24 hours it has neither gained nor lost overall.
Find a way the clock can run irregularly such that there is no continuous 576 minutes during which the clock shows that 576 minutes have passed.

Homework Equations


24 hours = 1440 minutes and ##576=\frac{2}{5}1440##.

The Attempt at a Solution



The likely idea is to divide the 24 hours/1440 minutes in a number of intervals and have the clock run faster in odd intervals (say running one hour in 30 minutes), then slower in even intervals (say running one hour in 90 minutes) so that overall it still runs 1440 minutes. I can't get the numbers to work though for 576 minutes.

Think about functions.
 
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PeroK said:
Think about functions.
You mean think about a specific function?
 
Jenny Physics said:
You mean think about a specific function?

Not a specific function, but what the graph would look like if you plotted time against time shown on the clock.
 
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PeroK said:
Not a specific function, but what the graph would look like if you plotted time against time shown on the clock.
I can imagine all sorts of such functions (sinusoidal, triangular) but not how to go about such that there are no continuous 576 minutes.
 
Jenny Physics said:
I can imagine all sorts of such functions (sinusoidal, triangular) but not how to go about such that there are no continuous 576 minutes.

To keep things simple I would assume the clock can't go backwards. Then the time shown against time is an increasing function.

Have you been studying the intermediate value theorem?

I'm signing off now. Merry Xmas!
 
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Assuming you need to stick to a 24hr period (i.e., no modular aritmetic), notice 1440/576 =25, which is odd, so we could combine increments/changes to cancel each other out...
 
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