top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

How much distance did the last person cover in that time if he ran the whole distance with uniform speed.

+3 votes
502 views

There is a 50m long army platoon marching ahead. The last person in the platoon wants to give a letter to the first person leading the platoon. So while the platoon is marching he runs ahead, reaches the first person and hands over the letter to him and without stopping he runs and comes back to his original position. In the mean time the whole platoon has moved ahead by 50m.

The question is how much distance did the last person cover in that time. Assuming that he ran the whole distance with uniform speed.

posted Nov 10, 2013 by Anuj Yadav

Share this puzzle
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button

1 Answer (Check Answer ▼)





Similar Puzzles
+1 vote

A rocket, initially at rest in deep space, starts its thrusters, which then burn and eject fuel at a uniform rate to provide constant thrust to the rocket.

How does the speed of the rocket vary with time?

a) The speed remains constant
b) The speed increases at a constant rate
c) The speed increases at a decreasing rate
d) The speed increases at an increasing rate

0 votes

Suresh has to cover a distance of 6 km in 45 minutes. If he covers one half of the distance in 2/3 of the time , what should be his speed to cover the remaining distance in the remaining time ?

0 votes

The speed of the train is two more than twice of the time taken to cover 1012 km at uniform speed.
What is the ratio of the values of time taken to cover the distance and speed of the train?

0 votes

The distance between two places R and S is 42 km. Anita starts from R with a uniform speed of 4 km/hr towards S and at the same time Romita starts from S towards R also with some uniform speed.
They meet each other after 6 hours.
What is the speed of Romita?

0 votes

A generous man set aside a certain sum of money for equal distribution
weekly to the needy of his acquaintance. One day he remarked, "If there are
five fewer applicants next week, you will each receive two dollars more." Unfortunately,
instead of there being fewer there were actually four more persons
applying for the gift.
"This means," he pointed out, "that you will each receive one dollar less."
How much did each person receive at that last distribution?

...