You come upon the grounds where a traveling circus is setting up camp, and notice what appears to be a fight about to break out. The ringleader is facing the wrath of one of the strongmen, who has just lifted the proprietor of the circus overhead in an apparent prelude to a smashing. Amidst the ringleader's begs for mercy, you ask what the trouble is. The strongman explains that he's sure the ringleader is paying some of the performers with counterfeit coins. He points toward several sacks of coins in a corner of a small tent and explains that one of them is bound to be full of counterfeits that are either slightly heavier or slightly lighter than genuine coins. The circus of course has a balance with which you can weigh the coins, but naturally the balance is on the brink of collapse and will only be able to provide a few more weighings to infinite precision before its warranty expires and it disintegrates. They ask if you might help them figure out if any of the bags are full of counterfeit coins, and if so, which.
Using your problem solving skills from the first few "puzzle land"s, since you can't find any noticeable difference between the coins on close inspection without using the balance, you haul all the cash to the local bank and deposit the coins in exchange for bills. The exchange proceeds without a complaint from the teller, and you win the circus crew's gratitude for giving them pay that's slightly less likely to be bogus, as well as a ticket to see their show.
But now they have another question for you. They're setting up the trapeze act and are wondering how far apart the platforms can be placed.
Those who have seen a circus are probably familiar with a typical trapeze setup. There's a high platform at one end of the circus, a trapeze with a bar that the acrobat can grasp from the platform, a second trapeze (often carrying someone who catches the first acrobat), and another platform after the second trapeze. You would naturally want the platforms to be as far apart as possible to put on a good show, but also don't want the acrobats to be doomed to fail.
How far apart can the two platforms be? Assume that the platforms are at the same height as the axis of the trapezes, and the ropes on both trapezes are equal in length. And as usual with "How would you cross puzzle land" riddles, either solving the riddle legitimately or cheating is acceptable, but cheating strategies must be creative and funny.
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plasmid
You come upon the grounds where a traveling circus is setting up camp, and notice what appears to be a fight about to break out. The ringleader is facing the wrath of one of the strongmen, who has just lifted the proprietor of the circus overhead in an apparent prelude to a smashing. Amidst the ringleader's begs for mercy, you ask what the trouble is. The strongman explains that he's sure the ringleader is paying some of the performers with counterfeit coins. He points toward several sacks of coins in a corner of a small tent and explains that one of them is bound to be full of counterfeits that are either slightly heavier or slightly lighter than genuine coins. The circus of course has a balance with which you can weigh the coins, but naturally the balance is on the brink of collapse and will only be able to provide a few more weighings to infinite precision before its warranty expires and it disintegrates. They ask if you might help them figure out if any of the bags are full of counterfeit coins, and if so, which.
Using your problem solving skills from the first few "puzzle land"s, since you can't find any noticeable difference between the coins on close inspection without using the balance, you haul all the cash to the local bank and deposit the coins in exchange for bills. The exchange proceeds without a complaint from the teller, and you win the circus crew's gratitude for giving them pay that's slightly less likely to be bogus, as well as a ticket to see their show.
But now they have another question for you. They're setting up the trapeze act and are wondering how far apart the platforms can be placed.
Those who have seen a circus are probably familiar with a typical trapeze setup. There's a high platform at one end of the circus, a trapeze with a bar that the acrobat can grasp from the platform, a second trapeze (often carrying someone who catches the first acrobat), and another platform after the second trapeze. You would naturally want the platforms to be as far apart as possible to put on a good show, but also don't want the acrobats to be doomed to fail.
How far apart can the two platforms be? Assume that the platforms are at the same height as the axis of the trapezes, and the ropes on both trapezes are equal in length. And as usual with "How would you cross puzzle land" riddles, either solving the riddle legitimately or cheating is acceptable, but cheating strategies must be creative and funny.
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