gmatter2012 wrote:lets say that both the glasses have same volume , does that help?
Here is my humble attempt to solve this:
M: W is 3:2
W: M is 2:3
to make the ratio W:M the same we need to add some extra water in the second glass 2+N:3 (as we can see that milk is more in the second glass)
2+N = 3. => N = 1...but 1 is 1/2 of the the water portion in the first glass..
I am assuming that the glasses are same size..
please tell me,if this looks incorrect.
Since the ratios are RECIPROCALS, an equal amount from each glass is needed to yield a ratio of 1:1.
Thus, if each glass contains the same volume, ALL of the liquid in the first glass must be poured into the second glass to yield M:W = 1:1.
To illustrate:
Let the total volume of each glass = 5 units.
First glass = 3 units of milk and 2 units of water.
Second glass = 2 units of milk and 3 units of water.
Thus, pouring the entirety of the first glass into the second glass will yield a mixture of 5 units of milk and 5 units of water:
M:W = 5:5 = 1:1.
Another way to view the problem:
In the first glass, of every 5 units, 3 units are milk:
M = 3/5 = 60%.
In the second glass, of every 5 units, 2 units are milk:
M = 2/5 = 40%.
Thus, for milk to be 50% of the mixture -- HALFWAY between 60% and 40% -- we must combine EQUAL amounts of the 60% solution and the 40% solution:
(60+40)/2 = 50%.
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