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25 January, 02:54

A two-inch-long grasshopper can jump a horizontal distance of 40 inches. An athlete, who is fi ve feet nine, wants to cover a distance of one mile by jumping. If this person could jump at the same ratio of body-length to jump-length as the grasshopper, determine, to the nearest jump, how many jumps it would take this athlete to jump one mile?

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  1. 25 January, 05:05
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    46 jumps

    Step-by-step explanation:

    Since the grasshopper is two inches long, and can jump a distance of 40 inches, then its jump ratio is 2:40 = 1:20.

    The athlete's body-length is 5 feet 9 inches. We convert this to inches which is 5 * 12 = 60 inches. We then add the remaining 9 inches to make it 60 + 9 = 69 inches. Since our jump ratio for the grasshopper equals that for the athlete, 1:20 = 69: 20 * 69 = 69 : 1380. Thus the athlete's jump ratio is 69 inches to 1380 inches.

    The athlete wants to cover one mile and we know that 1 mile = 63360 inches. So, we divide the distance the athlete wants to cover (1 mile = 63360 inches) by his jump-length (1380 inches) to get the number of jumps it takes to cover a mile. Number of jumps * jump-length of athlete = one mile, so Number of jumps = one mile/jump-length of athlete = 63360 inches / 1380 inches = 45.9 jumps ≈ 46 jumps.
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