Why Does Average Speed Calculation Differ for Uphill and Downhill Travel?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating average speeds for a bus traveling uphill and downhill. The average speed uphill is 3.33 m/s, while downhill it is 4.16 m/s, leading to an overall average speed of 3.70 m/s for the entire trip. The key point of confusion is why this overall average does not equal the arithmetic mean of the two speeds, which is 3.75 m/s. The explanation clarifies that the two averages differ because the bus spends unequal time on each segment, highlighting the importance of time in average speed calculations.
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Homework Statement


A Bus drives 1km up a hill in 5.0 minutes. It then drives down the hill in 4.0 minutes. For the bus, find
a) the average speed up the hill
b) the average speed down the hill
c)the average speed for the whole trip
d)why is the answer for c) not equal to (speed up the hill + speed down the hill) / 2

Homework Equations


v = d / t

The Attempt at a Solution


a) 1000/300 = 3.33 m/s
b) 1000/240 = 4.16 m/s
c) (1000 + 1000) / (300 + 240) = 3.70 m/s
d) *This is what i do not understand* The formula i am suppose to prove incorrect returns the same result as my calculation. Are my previous calculations incorrect, or are they suppose to be equal.
ie. (3.33 + 4.16)/2 = 3.745 m/s

Thanks,
 
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Welcome to PF,

guppster said:

Homework Statement


A Bus drives 1km up a hill in 5.0 minutes. It then drives down the hill in 4.0 minutes. For the bus, find
a) the average speed up the hill
b) the average speed down the hill
c)the average speed for the whole trip
d)why is the answer for c) not equal to (speed up the hill + speed down the hill) / 2

Homework Equations


v = d / t

The Attempt at a Solution


a) 1000/300 = 3.33 m/s
b) 1000/240 = 4.16 m/s
c) (1000 + 1000) / (300 + 240) = 3.70 m/s
d) *This is what i do not understand* The formula i am suppose to prove incorrect returns the same result as my calculation. Are my previous calculations incorrect, or are they suppose to be equal.
ie. (3.33 + 4.16)/2 = 3.745 m/s

Thanks,

They're NOT equal. 3.70 m/s ≠ 3.75 m/s
 
cepheid said:
Welcome to PF,



They're NOT equal. 3.70 m/s ≠ 3.75 m/s

Thank you for welcoming me to PF.
I am truly very grateful you replied.

Is there a valid reason for this inequality, i think it is because the velocity values are not very precise.
 
guppster said:
Thank you for welcoming me to PF.
I am truly very grateful you replied.

Is there a valid reason for this inequality, i think it is because the velocity values are not very precise.

Nope, that's not the reason. These two averages are not supposed to be the same, unless the car spends equal time covering both distances, which it doesn't. You can show this mathematically. If v1 = d1/t1 and v2 = d2/t2, and v = (d1 + d2)/(t1 + t2), how does v compare to (1/2)(v1 + v2) algebraically? Are they the same?
 
cepheid said:
Nope, that's not the reason. These two averages are not supposed to be the same, unless the car spends equal time covering both distances, which it doesn't. You can show this mathematically. If v1 = d1/t1 and v2 = d2/t2, and v = (d1 + d2)/(t1 + t2), how does v compare to (1/2)(v1 + v2) algebraically? Are they the same?

Um, No they are not the same.
 
guppster said:
Um, No they are not the same.

Did you work it out? Can you show me your work? Plug in the expressions for v in terms of d and t for each of the velocities (v1, v2).
 
v1 = d1/t1
v2 = d2/t2

like this?

(1/2)(d1/t1 + d2/t2)
 
guppster said:
v1 = d1/t1
v2 = d2/t2

like this?

(1/2)(d1/t1 + d2/t2)


Yeah exactly. Now, if you compare that to v = (d1 + d2)/(t1 + t2), you can easily see that these two expressions are not the same, *unless* if t1 = t2, in which case they become the same.
 
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