Official GMAT Test Question - Arithmetic

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Which of the following procedures is always equivalent to adding 5 given numbers and then dividing the sum by 5?

I. Multiplying the 5 numbers and then finding the 5 th root of the product.
II. Adding the 5 numbers, doubling the sum, and then moving the decimal point one place to the left.
III. Ordering the 5 numbers numerically and then selecting the middle number.

(A) None
(B) I only
(C) II only
(D) III only
(E) I and III

I am really lost.
Can someone please help me?

Thanks!
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by srcc25anu » Tue Apr 30, 2013 4:56 pm
Adding 5 numbers and dividing the sum by 5:
Case 1: If numbers are {1,2,3,4,5} then sum = 15 and result = 15/5 = 3
Case 2: If numbers are {2,4,4,10,15} then sum = 35 and result = 35/5 = 7

ST1: Multiplying the 5 numbers and then finding the 5 th root of the product.
Case 1: Product of 5 nos = 120 and 5th root is NOT EQUAL to 3 (Not TRUE)
Caes 2: Product of 5 nos = 2^6 * 3 * 5^2 and 5th root is NOT EQUAL to 7 (Not TRUE)
NOT TRUE

St2: Adding the 5 numbers, doubling the sum, and then moving the decimal point one place to the left.
Case 1: Sum of 5 nos = 15, Mult by 2 = 30 and taking decimal 1 place to the left = 3 (True)
Case 2: Sum of 5 nos = 35, Mult by 2 = 70 and taking decimal 1 place to the left = 7 (True)
TRUE

ST3: Ordering the 5 numbers numerically and then selecting the middle number.
Case 1: Numerically ordering 5 nos = {1,2,3,4,5}, middle number = 3 (TRUE)
Case 2: Numerically ordering 5 nos = {2,4,4,10,15}, middle number = 4 (NOT TRUE)
Not True

Hence only statement 2 is always TRUE.
Ans C

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by Ankur87 » Wed May 01, 2013 10:33 am
Ans:
take any 5 numbers :
1,3,4,5,6
Adding them : 1+3+4+5+6 = 19
19/5 = 3.8
A)incorrect.
B)
sum = 19
19*2 = 38 shifting decimal to left gives 3.8 which is equal to 19/5 i.e. 3.8
C)incorrect as it gives 4 as middle term.
sparkles3144 wrote:Which of the following procedures is always equivalent to adding 5 given numbers and then dividing the sum by 5?

I. Multiplying the 5 numbers and then finding the 5 th root of the product.
II. Adding the 5 numbers, doubling the sum, and then moving the decimal point one place to the left.
III. Ordering the 5 numbers numerically and then selecting the middle number.

(A) None
(B) I only
(C) II only
(D) III only
(E) I and III

I am really lost.
Can someone please help me?

Thanks!

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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Wed May 01, 2013 11:39 am
sparkles3144 wrote:Which of the following procedures is always equivalent to adding 5 given numbers and then dividing the sum by 5?

I. Multiplying the 5 numbers and then finding the 5 th root of the product.
II. Adding the 5 numbers, doubling the sum, and then moving the decimal point one place to the left.
III. Ordering the 5 numbers numerically and then selecting the middle number.

(A) None
(B) I only
(C) II only
(D) III only
(E) I and III

I am really lost.
Can someone please help me?

Thanks!
Testing numbers is fine up to a point, in that it can help us rule out certain answer choices.
To be 100% certain, we need a more algebraic approach.

Let the five numbers be a, b, c, d and e.

We're looking for procedures equivalent to (a+b+c+d+e)/5

I. Multiplying the 5 numbers and then finding the 5th root of the product.
This is the same as 5throot(abcde) or (abcde)^(1/5)
(abcde)^(1/5) is NOT equivalent to (a+b+c+d+e)/5
Eliminate I

II. Adding the 5 numbers, doubling the sum, and then moving the decimal point one place to the left.
First, moving the decimal point one place to the left is the same as dividing by 10.
For example, 56.7/10 = 5.67
So, the procedure is the same as adding the 5 numbers, doubling the sum, and dividing by 10.
Using our numbers, we get 2(a+b+c+d+e)/10 = (a+b+c+d+e)/5
Perfect.
Keep II

VERY IMPORTANT: At this point, we need not check statement III, since there is no answer choice that says statements II and III both work.

Answer: C

Cheers,
Brent
Brent Hanneson - Creator of GMATPrepNow.com
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