The number line shown contains 3 points R, S, and T, whose coordinates have absolute values r, s, and t, respectively. Which of the following equals the average of the coordinates of the points R, S, and T?
(A)s
(B)s + t + r
(C)(r-s-t)/3
(D)(r+s+t)/3
(E)(s+t-r)/3
Sorry I can't draw but just an idea;
<----R------0----S----T---->
Since the coordinates are given in absolute values, I felt their average
is simply (r+s+t)/3
the number line shown contains 3 points
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Hi peter456,
This question can be solved by TESTing VALUES.
Based on their positions on the number line, we know that S and T are POSITIVE and R is NEGATIVE, so let's TEST...
R = -3
S = 1
T = 2
Since r, s and t are the ABSOLUTE VALUES of those 3 numbers, we have...
r = 3
s = 1
t = 2
The question asks for the AVERAGE of R, S and T, so we're looking for an answer that equals (-3 + 1 + 2)/3 = 0/3 = 0.
(A) s = 3 NOT a match
(B) s + t + r = 6 NOT a match
(C) (r-s-t)/3 = 0 This IS a match
(D) (r+s+t)/3 = 2 NOT a match
(E) (r+s-t)/3 = 2/3 NOT a match
Final Answer: C
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
This question can be solved by TESTing VALUES.
Based on their positions on the number line, we know that S and T are POSITIVE and R is NEGATIVE, so let's TEST...
R = -3
S = 1
T = 2
Since r, s and t are the ABSOLUTE VALUES of those 3 numbers, we have...
r = 3
s = 1
t = 2
The question asks for the AVERAGE of R, S and T, so we're looking for an answer that equals (-3 + 1 + 2)/3 = 0/3 = 0.
(A) s = 3 NOT a match
(B) s + t + r = 6 NOT a match
(C) (r-s-t)/3 = 0 This IS a match
(D) (r+s+t)/3 = 2 NOT a match
(E) (r+s-t)/3 = 2/3 NOT a match
Final Answer: C
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
Hi EmpowerGmat,[email protected] wrote:Hi peter456,
This question can be solved by TESTing VALUES.
Based on their positions on the number line, we know that S and T are POSITIVE and R is NEGATIVE, so let's TEST...
R = -3
S = 1
T = 2
Since r, s and t are the ABSOLUTE VALUES of those 3 numbers, we have...
r = 3
s = 1
t = 2
The question asks for the AVERAGE of R, S and T, so we're looking for an answer that equals (-3 + 1 + 2)/3 = 0/3 = 0.
(A) s = 3 NOT a match
(B) s + t + r = 6 NOT a match
(C) (r-s-t)/3 = 0 This IS a match
(D) (r+s+t)/3 = 2 NOT a match
(E) (r+s-t)/3 = 2/3 NOT a match
Final Answer: C
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
The OA is not C; hwever, option E should be (s+t-r)/3, the OA.
Could u please revisit this question?
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We need to find the average of the coordinates. Average = Sum/Numberpeter456 wrote:The number line shown contains 3 points R, S, and T, whose coordinates have absolute values r, s, and t, respectively. Which of the following equals the average of the coordinates of the points R, S, and T?
(A)s
(B)s + t + r
(C)(r-s-t)/3
(D)(r+s+t)/3
(E)(s+t-r)/3
Sorry I can't draw but just an idea;
<----R------0----S----T---->
Since the coordinates are given in absolute values, I felt their average
is simply (r+s+t)/3
The absolute value of a number is the POSITIVE DISTANCE between that number and zero.
S and T are to the right of 0 on the number line. So the values of their coordinates are greater than 0. So the values of s and t, which are ABSOLUTE values of the coordinates, are the same as the values of the coordinates.
R is to the left of 0 on the number line. So the value of R's coordinate is less than 0. r is an absolute value. So the value of R's coordinate, which is a negative number, is -r.
To find the average of the values of the three coordinates, find the sum of the coordinates and divide by the number of coordinates.
(s + t - r)/3 = the average of the coordinates
The correct answer is E.
Marty Murray
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Perfect Scoring Tutor With Over a Decade of Experience
MartyMurrayCoaching.com
Contact me at [email protected] for a free consultation.
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Hi peter456,
Since you've made an edit to the original question, I'm curious if you fixed any typos in the answer choices (the original Answer E that I copied from your post doesn't match the current Answer E that is listed there). Regardless, with the "new" Answer E, and the 3 numbers that I chose to TEST, we would have TWO answers that match: BOTH Answer C and Answer E.
In a situation in which more than one answer appears correct, you have to TEST a "new" set of VALUES, although you don't necessarily have to change all of them. In this case, you can change just the value of R and r and you'll get the correct answer.
If we TEST:
R = -4
S = 1
T = 2
Then we have....
r = 4
s = 1
t = 2
The average of R, S and T equals -1/3, so we're looking for THAT result in Answers C and E.
(C)(r-s-t)/3 = +1/3 NOT a match
(E)(s+t-r)/3 = -1/3 This IS a match
Final Answer: E
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
Since you've made an edit to the original question, I'm curious if you fixed any typos in the answer choices (the original Answer E that I copied from your post doesn't match the current Answer E that is listed there). Regardless, with the "new" Answer E, and the 3 numbers that I chose to TEST, we would have TWO answers that match: BOTH Answer C and Answer E.
In a situation in which more than one answer appears correct, you have to TEST a "new" set of VALUES, although you don't necessarily have to change all of them. In this case, you can change just the value of R and r and you'll get the correct answer.
If we TEST:
R = -4
S = 1
T = 2
Then we have....
r = 4
s = 1
t = 2
The average of R, S and T equals -1/3, so we're looking for THAT result in Answers C and E.
(C)(r-s-t)/3 = +1/3 NOT a match
(E)(s+t-r)/3 = -1/3 This IS a match
Final Answer: E
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
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Hi peter456,
The prompt asks for the average of R, S and T. From the number line, we can see that R is NEGATIVE though, so that is going to impact the sum of those three variables.
The variables r, s and t are all POSITIVE, since they're the respective absolute values of R, S and T. If you were taking the average of THESE 3 variables, the result would ALWAYS be positive. When taking the average of R, S and T though, the average could end up negative or 0. Thus, Answer D cannot be correct.
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
The prompt asks for the average of R, S and T. From the number line, we can see that R is NEGATIVE though, so that is going to impact the sum of those three variables.
The variables r, s and t are all POSITIVE, since they're the respective absolute values of R, S and T. If you were taking the average of THESE 3 variables, the result would ALWAYS be positive. When taking the average of R, S and T though, the average could end up negative or 0. Thus, Answer D cannot be correct.
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich