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6 November, 14:26

You and your roommate are moving to a city 380 mimi away. Your roommate drives a rental truck at a constant 55 mi/hmi/h, and you drive your car at 65 mi/hmi/h. The two of you begin the trip at the same instant. An hour after leaving, you decide to take a short break at a rest stop. If you are planning to arrive at your destination a half hour before your roommate gets there, how long can you stay at the rest stop before resuming your drive? Express your answer using two significant figures. t = Min

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  1. 6 November, 14:44
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    You can stay at the rest stop for 36 min.

    Explanation:

    Hi there!

    First, let's calculate how much does it take to your roommate to reach the destination. For this we use the equation of traveled distance at constant speed:

    x = v · t

    Where:

    x = traveled distance.

    v = speed.

    t = time.

    Solving for t:

    x/v = t

    380 mi / 55 mi/h = t

    t = 6.9 h

    It takes your roommate 6.9 h to reach your destination.

    Now, let's see how much distance do you travel in an hour before stopping:

    x = v · t

    x = 65 mi/h · 1 h

    x = 65 mi

    And now let's see in how much time you can do the rest of the trip:

    x = 380 mi - 65 mi = 315 mi

    x/v = t

    315 mi / 65 mi/h = t

    t = 4.8 h

    Then, you will travel for (1 h + 4.8 h) 5.8 h. If you want to reach your destination 0.5 h before your roommate (that is, in (6.9 h - 0.5 h) 6.4 h after departing), you can stay at the rest stop for (6.4 h - 5.8 h) 0.6 h. In minutes:

    0.6 h · (60 min / h) = 36 min

    You can stay at the rest stop for 36 min.
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