Guest Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 (edited) A colony of 60 beetles in search of food came near a plant X. They can feed on the arbitary plant X for 40 days. Assume here that the plant X grows at an even rate. Also 40 beetles can feed on plant X for 80 days. So how many days could 20 beetles feed on the plant X? Edited July 20, 2011 by 14.swapnil.14 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Guest Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 (edited) Indefinitely. The plant grows faster than the feeding rate of the 20 beetles. Here's the proof: Let Uo, U be the starting size and current size (units of food) of the plant. If it grows at a uniform rate, U = Uo + (a - bN)T where a is the growth rate and b is the eating rate of a beetle, N is the number of beetles and T is the time in days. plugging in the givens above, we now have the 2 equations: Uo + 40(a - 60b) = 0 Uo + 80(a - 40b) = 0 Which gives a = Uo/40; b = Uo/1200 So U = Uo[1 + (1/40 - N/1200)T] putting N = 20 gives U = Uo(1 + T/120) which shows a positive growth rate despite the 20 beetles feeding on it Edited July 20, 2011 by rparry Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Guest Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 (edited) <deleted> Edited July 20, 2011 by rparry Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 k-man Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 Assuming that the "even rate of growth" means a constant amount added every day regardless of the current size of the plant, 20 beetles can feed on this plant forever as the amount of daily growth will be equal to the daily consumption of 20 beetles. Let's call the daily growth rate Y. In 40 days 60 beetles eat X + 40Y. In 80 days 40 beetles consume X + 80Y. From this we can figure out the daily consumption of a single beetle. (X + 40Y) / (40 * 60) = (X + 80Y) / (40 * 80) 80X + 3200Y = 60X + 4800Y 20X = 1600Y X = 80Y After the substitution we get the daily consumption of a single beetle is (80Y + 80Y) / (40 * 80) = Y/20 So a single beetle eats 1/20 of the daily growth per day, so 20 beetles eat exactly the amount of daily growth Y. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Guest Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 (edited) Assuming that the "even rate of growth" means a constant amount added every day regardless of the current size of the plant, 20 beetles can feed on this plant forever as the amount of daily growth will be equal to the daily consumption of 20 beetles. Let's call the daily growth rate Y. In 40 days 60 beetles eat X + 40Y. In 80 days 40 beetles consume X + 80Y. From this we can figure out the daily consumption of a single beetle. (X + 40Y) / (40 * 60) = (X + 80Y) / (40 * 80) 80X + 3200Y = 60X + 4800Y 20X = 1600Y X = 80Y After the substitution we get the daily consumption of a single beetle is (80Y + 80Y) / (40 * 80) = Y/20 So a single beetle eats 1/20 of the daily growth per day, so 20 beetles eat exactly the amount of daily growth Y. This also assumes that the eaten parts of the plant keep growing at the same rate Edited July 20, 2011 by rparry Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 k-man Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 Indefinitely. The plant grows faster than the feeding rate of the 20 beetles. Here's the proof: Let Uo, U be the starting size and current size (units of food) of the plant. If it grows at a uniform rate, U = Uo + (a - bN)T where a is the growth rate and b is the eating rate of a beetle, N is the number of beetles and T is the time in days. plugging in the givens above, we now have the 2 equations: Uo + 40(a - 60b) = 0 Uo + 80(a - 40b) = 0 Which gives a = Uo/40; b = Uo/1200 So U = Uo[1 + (1/40 - N/1200)T] putting N = 20 gives U = Uo(1 + T/120) which shows a positive growth rate despite the 20 beetles feeding on it Welcome to the Den, rparry. Please use spoilers when posting the answers. Your equations are correct, buy you made a mistake in your calculations. Solving these equations results in a=Uo/80 and b=Uo/1600. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 k-man Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 This also assumes that the eaten parts of the plant keep growing at the same rate That's right. I stated that assumption in my answer. We both make the same assumption basically treating the plant as a renewing source of food with constant daily increment. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 dark_magician_92 Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 i gave it a try, but i am not sure about this. i am taking 'y' as the growth per day, which occurs once per day, not per second. let 'a' be plant size, 'y' be the grwoth, then in 40 days, total plant length they ate is a+40y, by 60 beetles in 40 days, so plant length eaten/per beetle/ day= a+60y/2400, similarly for 2nd case, a+80y/3200, hence 1 and 2 can be equated, a+40y/2400 = a+80y/3200, therefore a=80y. now say, theuy take 'k' days for 3rd case, then a+ky/20k=a+40y/2400, whick gives k= 12800/0 i.e. infinite time, thinking about it, 1 beetle , 1 day = a+40y/2400 = 80y+40y/2400 =y/20, 20 beetles, 1 day= y, so eating = growth, so infinite time AND LUCKY BEETLES Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Guest Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 Welcome to the Den, rparry. Please use spoilers when posting the answers. Your equations are correct, buy you made a mistake in your calculations. Solving these equations results in a=Uo/80 and b=Uo/1600. Sorry, you're right. I ran out of space on the post-it Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Peekay Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 Without even going into equations, it is apparent from the problem statement that 20 beetles were just keeping up with the growth while the rest were devouring the original height (or length) of the plant. So, assuming that the growth rate of the plant is independent of the height of the plant, 20 beetles can happily feed on the plant for ever. Why can't we get a source of food like this growing in our backyard? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Guest Posted July 20, 2011 Report Share Posted July 20, 2011 A colony of 60 beetles in search of food came near a plant X. They can feed on the arbitary plant X for 40 days. Assume here that the plant X grows at an even rate. Also 40 beetles can feed on plant X for 80 days. So how many days could 20 beetles feed on the plant X? My guess would be 160 days for 20 beetles. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Guest Posted July 21, 2011 Report Share Posted July 21, 2011 Also the size of plant X would remain same Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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A colony of 60 beetles in search of food came near a plant X.
They can feed on the arbitary plant X for 40 days.
Assume here that the plant X grows at an even rate.
Also 40 beetles can feed on plant X for 80 days.
So how many days could 20 beetles feed on the plant X?
Edited by 14.swapnil.14Link to comment
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