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Problems of the Week – June 10 to June 14

Click here [1] for the Problem Extension Worksheet version of the Problems of the Week.
Click here [2] for an MS Word version of the Problems of the Week.
Click here [3] for the Canadian Problem Extension Worksheet version of the Problems of the Week.
Click here [4] for a Canadian MS Word version of the Problems of the Week.

Lower Elementary:
Question: The Moon is 3,500 kilometers wide. The Earth is 12,700 kilometers wide. How many kilometers wider is the Earth than the Moon?
Answer: 9,200 kilometers
Solution: To solve the problem, we want to set up a vertical equation, start at the ones place, and move left. We know that 0 – 0 = 0, so we can fill in the ones and tens places and move on to the hundreds. 7 hundred minus 5 hundred is 2 hundred, and 12 thousand minus 3 thousand is 9 thousand. Altogether, that makes 9,200 km.

Upper Elementary:
Question: For every 2 revolutions Pluto makes around the Sun, Neptune makes 3. How many revolutions does Pluto complete if Neptune completes 21?
Answer: 14 revolutions
Solution: The ratio of Pluto’s revolutions to Neptune’s revolutions is 2:3. To find out how many revolutions Pluto completes, we first need to find out how many times Neptune makes 3 trips. 21 ÷ 3 = 7, so Neptune make 7 sets of 3 revolutions. That means that Pluto makes 7 sets of 2 revolutions, which means that Pluto revolves around the sun 7 × 2 = 14 times.

Middle School:
Question: Callisto, Europa, Ganymede, and Io are moons of Jupiter. Ganymede is not the farthest moon from Jupiter. Callisto’s orbit is not the closest orbit to Io’s. Europa is closer to Jupiter than Ganymede is. Io is the closest to Jupiter. What is Jupiter’s farthest moon?
Answer: Callisto
Solution: Right off the bat, we know that Io is the closest and Ganymede is not the farthest. Next, we can deduce that Europa is the second closest because that’s the only possible way for it to be closer to Jupiter than Ganymede, which must therefore be third. That leaves Callisto, which must therefore be the farthest. Tip: Use a logic table to keep track of the information.

Algebra & Up:
Question: Mars has a radius of 3,000 kilometers. Venus has a radius of 6,000 kilometers. How many cubic kilometers greater is the volume of Venus than the volume of Mars? Give your answer in terms of pi.
Answer: 252,000,000,000 π km3 or 2.52 × 1011 π km3
Solution: We use the formula 4/3πr3 to find the volume of each planet. Venus’s volume is 288,000,000,000π km3, and Mars’s volume is 36,000,000,000π km3. The difference is therefore 252,000,000,000π km3.

1 Comment (Open | Close)

1 Comment To "Problems of the Week – June 10 to June 14"

#1 Comment By Bill Curtis On June 26, 2019 @ 10:32 am

Very nice set of problems. Thank you!