Step 1: There are several key facts we need to pull out of the question. First, that there's a relationship between hamsters and the amount of time a light bulb is in use: it takes 2 hamsters to run a light bulb for 1 hour. Second, light bulbs stay on for 8 hours a day. That means that, for instance, 2 light bulbs will be used for 16 hours total, and so on. Third, Gary will replace "at least" 5 light bulbs (so that includes 5), but won't do 10 or more (so 9 is good, but 10 is not). Fourth, Gary somehow uses hamsters to farm. How? We don't know. Why? We don't really care. It's not relevant to the problem. Step 2: How many hamsters does it take to run 5 light bulbs for a day? How many hamsters does it take to run 7? What about 9? We want to know them all. Not 10, though; for some reason, we're helping Gary evade the law with his crazy animal labor scheme, so we're not going to let him get caught. Unknown = number of hamsters to run the light bulbs for a day Step 3: We know a lot about the light bulbs: how many Gary can use, and how long each one runs in a day. We also know how long a hamster can run a light bulb. We just want to know how many hamsters are needed. We're going to need to use 2 equations to get this done. One to find how many hours a day of light bulb use there are, and the other to find how many hamsters it will take to create that much light. Number of light bulb hours = Number of light bulbs × Hours used each day Number of hamsters = Number of light bulb hours × Hamsters needed per hour Step 4: Let's fill in all of the labels we just made. For our light bulbs, though, we have a minimum number and a maximum number we can have, so we'll need to look at both. Number of light bulbs (minimum) = 5 light bulbs Number of light bulbs (maximum) = 9 light bulbs Number light bulb hours = t hours Number of hamsters = h hamsters Step 5: We've done the hard work already; now we just plug in our labels and get ready to solve up a storm. h (min and max) = 2t Step 6: Time to solve for the minimum and maximum number of hamsters needed to pull off this scheme. h (minimum) = 2(40) = 80 h (maximum) = 2(72) = 144 Step 7: Gary can use between 80 and 144 hamsters to power his light bulbs each day. In math-speak, we can show this as: 80 ≤ h ≤ 144 hamsters That is really messed up; guess Gary really is deranged. The inequality signs are inclusive because he can use "at least" 5 light bulbs (80 hamsters worth of light) and up to 9 light bulbs (but not more). He can't replace 9.5 light bulbs, so that's why we went up to 9 and not 10. |