It takes the high-speed train \(x\) hours to travel the

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It takes the high-speed train \(x\) hours to travel the \(z\) miles from Town \(A\) to Town \(B\) at a constant rate, while it takes the regular train y hours to travel the same distance at a constant rate. If the high-speed train leaves Town \(A\) for Town \(B\) at the same time that the regular train leaves Town \(B\) for Town \(A\), how many more miles will the high-speed train have traveled than the regular train when the two trains pass each other?

A. z(y - x)/x + y

B. z(x - y)/x + y

C. z(x + y)/y - x

D. xy(x - y)/x + y

E. xy(y - x)/x + y

The OA is A

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by Jay@ManhattanReview » Tue Aug 06, 2019 9:17 pm
swerve wrote:It takes the high-speed train \(x\) hours to travel the \(z\) miles from Town \(A\) to Town \(B\) at a constant rate, while it takes the regular train y hours to travel the same distance at a constant rate. If the high-speed train leaves Town \(A\) for Town \(B\) at the same time that the regular train leaves Town \(B\) for Town \(A\), how many more miles will the high-speed train have traveled than the regular train when the two trains pass each other?

A. z(y - x)/x + y

B. z(x - y)/x + y

C. z(x + y)/y - x

D. xy(x - y)/x + y

E. xy(y - x)/x + y

The OA is A

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Since the two trains are moving in the opposite direction, their relative speed will be an addition of their speeds.

Speed of high-speed train = z/x and Speed of regular train = z/y

Thus, time when the two tarins pass each other = Distance / Total time = z / (z/x + z/y) = xy/(x + y) hours

Distance traveled by train A = Speed * Time = z/x * [xy/(x + y)] = zy/(x + y) miles
Distance traveled by train B = Speed * Time = z/y * [xy/(x + y)] = zx/(x + y) miles

=> More miles the high-speed train traveled than the regular train when the two trains pass each other = zy/(x + y) - zx/(x + y) = z(y - x)/(x + y) miles

The correct answer: A

Hope this helps!

-Jay
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by Scott@TargetTestPrep » Sun Aug 11, 2019 6:45 pm
swerve wrote:It takes the high-speed train \(x\) hours to travel the \(z\) miles from Town \(A\) to Town \(B\) at a constant rate, while it takes the regular train y hours to travel the same distance at a constant rate. If the high-speed train leaves Town \(A\) for Town \(B\) at the same time that the regular train leaves Town \(B\) for Town \(A\), how many more miles will the high-speed train have traveled than the regular train when the two trains pass each other?

A. z(y - x)/x + y

B. z(x - y)/x + y

C. z(x + y)/y - x

D. xy(x - y)/x + y

E. xy(y - x)/x + y

The OA is A

Source: Manhattan Prep
We have a converging rate problem in which:

Distance(1) + Distance(2) = Total Distance

We are given that it takes the high-speed train x hours to travel the z miles from Town A to Town B at a constant rate, while it takes the regular train y hours to travel the same distance at a constant rate. Thus, we know the following:

rate of the high-speed train = z/x

rate of the regular-speed train = z/y

We are also given that they leave at the same time, so we can let the time that has elapsed when both trains pass each other be t. We can substitute our values into the total distance formula.

Distance(1) + Distance(2) = Total Distance

(z/x)t + (z/y)t = z

zt/x + zt/y = z

We can divide the entire equation by z and we have:

t/x + t/y = 1

Multiplying the entire equation by xy gives us:

ty + tx = xy

t(y + x) = xy

t = xy/(y + x)

Now we can calculate the distance traveled by both trains for time t, using the following formula:

distance = rate x time

distance of high-speed train = (z/x)[xy/(y + x)] = zy/(y + x)

distance of regular-speed train = (z/y)[xy/(y + x)] = zx/(y + x)

Now we need to calculate the difference between the distance of the high-speed train and the distance of the regular-speed train:

difference of distance traveled = distance of high-speed train - distance of regular-speed train

difference of distance traveled = zy/(y + x) - zx/(y + x)

difference of distance traveled = (zy - zx)/(y + x) = z(y - x)/(x + y)

Answer: A

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