berkeman said:
No, m/s is meters per second. Think about it -- if it were miles per second, that would be one FAST biker!
And on your problem, approach it with the definition of average speed. It's distance per time, right? So write the equation for the speed in terms of the distance and time. The distance is the
same both coming and going, right? So
what does that say about each time? And then how do you combine them to get the overall average?
It says that one time is faster than the other. In that, the first journey [to work] he was slower and the second journey [back home] he was faster...
...so if I were to assume that the distance from his house to his workplace [and vice-versa] is 18m and;
1) on his trip to work he took 6 sec.
2) on his trip back home, he took 2 sec.
...and if I also assume that the distance is 27m [for solid evidence];
1) on his trip to work he took 9 sec.
2) on his trip back home, he took 3 sec.
...it can be concluded that the time taken to go home is thrice the time he took to go to work.
So, therefore:
Total speed when heading to work is: 3 m/s
Total speed when heading back to home covering same distance: 9 m/s
Therefore, the final speed is thrice that of initial speed: 9/3 = 3
Average speed is: 3 m/s + 9 m/s = 12 m/s / 3 =
4 m/s
So yeah, 4 m/s is close enough to 4.5 m/s. I hope I'm right. Am I?