Hour Glass Problem, solution.
This is a clear case where the formal knowledge alone does not lead to a very good solution.
To prove this point I'll give four solutions.
Solution #1
Let us again make use of the identity
a*X - b*Y = 1
Let a = 11 and b = 7. It's immediately verified that the identity is satisfied by X = 2
and Y = 3. This suggests the following strategy:
Start both glasses. When they become successively empty, turn the small glass, then the big one and the small
one again. On its third run the small glass will empty 21 minutes from the start of the
experiment. Start boiling your eggs at this point but do not yet turn the 7 min glass. After
1 minute (22 minutes after the beginning of the experiment) the big hour glass will become empty. Now,
use the small glass twice to count 14 minutes. 1 + 14 = 15. In all, it will take 4 turns for
the small glass and 1 turn for the bigger one. Five turns is not too much. However, a shorter
solution exists.
Solution #2 (Credits go to my wife Lana)
Start both hour glasses. At the end of 7 minutes restart the small one. At the end of 11 minutes restart the big
hour glass. The small one at this point has 3 minutes to go. When it empties begin boiling
your eggs. The big hour glass will run for another 8 minutes. After that use the small hour glass
to measure another 7 minutes. 8 + 7 = 15. This solution requires turning the small hour glass twice and the big one just once
which sums up to 3 turns.
Solution #3 (Credits go to my son David)
Again, start both glasses. After it empties, turn the small glass, start boiling your eggs and continue watching
the big glass. When, at the end of 11 minutes, the big one empties the small glass will be running
for 4 minutes. Turn the big glass and wait another 11 minutes. 4 + 11 = 15. All it takes is 2 turns of the big glass. It's
an absolute minimum.
Remark
Thanks to Andre Gustavo dos Santos from Brasil for pointing out that turning the small glass
is quite redundant.
Remark
In the spirit of the Three Glass Problem I'd like to note
that Solution #3 is suggestive of the following formal statement:
Statement
Let there be two hour glasses with capacities a and b (b>a) minutes. Using these two
glasses, is it possible to measure an interval c = 2b-a ?
The answer is, of course, YES. Indeed, start both glasses. The moment the small glass
becomes empty check your clock. From this point, it will take (b-a) minutes until the big
one becomes empty. When it does, turn it and wait another b minutes. (b-a)+b = 2b-a.
Thus, starting with one problem we actually solved many others:
1. For a perfect breakfast, a fellow decides to boil an egg exactly 13 minutes. He has two hour glasses - one for 5 minutes, another for 9.
How should he go about preparing his breakfast? How many times will he have to turn hour glasses? What would be the minimal required number of glass turns?
2. For a perfect breakfast, a fellow decides to boil an egg exactly 16 minutes. He has two hour glasses - one for 8 minutes, another for 12. How should he go about preparing his breakfast? How many times will he have to turn hour glasses? What would be the minimal required number of glass turns?
And so on. (As was pointed out by Clive Townsend, the last problem has a trivial solution: using the 8 minutes glass twice. So, it's always nice to have a general solution, but such a solution is not necessarily the best possible.)
Solution #4 (Thanks to John Flynn)
Hi
I wanted to add my own friendly two-cent solution to the 15min egg problem.
At time0 start both timers, and begin to cook the egg.
At time7, timer7 expires- flip it over.
At time11, timer11 expires. Timer7 now has 3min of sand on top and 4min of sand on bottom. So flip over timer7!
At time15, timer7 expires. 15 minutes have passed.
Total of 2 flips. I agree that this doesn't (and can't) beat the one-flip solution, but it does allow the egg to be cooked immediately- not wait 7
minutes as Solution #3 requires. This of course is a big advantage given the cost of energy, and the fact that our need to purchase oil from other
nations is a leading contributor to our nation's trade deficit problem!
However, given that this is the age of electronics, my solutions's drawback is that it TRULY requires 'hour-glasses'. That is, chronographs would
not support my solution since it requires the device to count up as well as down at the same time. (the bottom sand is counting from 0 to 7 min, while
the top sand is counting down from 7min to 0) Unless, the chronograph had both an up and down function, as many of today's Sport watches have; this
is because sports clocks count time-remaining, not time-elapsed.
But of course, if you were using a watch, or equivalent, you would simply
time 15 minutes directly! But that wouldn't make much a puzzle now either.
Hope you enjoyed my light-hearted and long-winded resolution.
John
References
- M.Gardner, Mathematical Circus, Vintage Books, NY, 1981
- D.Wells, The Penguin Book of Curious and Interesting Puzzles, Penguin Books, 1992
Copyright © 1996-2008 Alexander Bogomolny
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