9.1: Which Would You Choose?
If you were babysitting, would you rather
- Charge \$5 for the first hour and \$8 for each additional hour?
Or
- Charge \$15 for the first hour and \$6 for each additional hour?
Let’s use equations to think about situations.
If you were babysitting, would you rather
Or
The amount of water in two tanks every 5 minutes is shown in the table.
row 1 | time (minutes) | tank 1 (liters) | tank 2 (liters) |
---|---|---|---|
row 2 | 0 | 25 | 1000 |
row 3 | 5 | 175 | 900 |
row 4 | 10 | 325 | 800 |
row 5 | 15 | 475 | 700 |
row 6 | 20 | 625 | 600 |
row 7 | 25 | 775 | 500 |
row 8 | 30 | 925 | 400 |
row 9 | 35 | 1075 | 300 |
row 10 | 40 | 1225 | 200 |
row 11 | 45 | 1375 | 100 |
row 12 | 50 | 1525 | 0 |
A building has two elevators that both go above and below ground.
At a certain time of day, the travel time it takes elevator A to reach height $h$ in meters is $0.8 h + 16$ seconds.
The travel time it takes elevator B to reach height $h$ in meters is $\text-0.8 h + 12$ seconds.
Imagine a full 1,500 liter water tank that springs a leak, losing 2 liters per minute. We could represent the number of liters left in the tank with the expression $\text-2x+1,\!500$, where $x$ represents the number of minutes the tank has been leaking.
Now imagine at the same time, a second tank has 300 liters and is being filled at a rate of 6 liters per minute. We could represent the amount of water in liters in this second tank with the expression $6x+300$, where $x$ represents the number of minutes that have passed.
Since one tank is losing water and the other is gaining water, at some point they will have the same amount of water—but when? Asking when the two tanks have the same number of liters is the same as asking when $\text-2x+1,\!500$ (the number of liters in the first tank after $x$ minutes) is equal to $6x+300$ (the number of liters in the second tank after $x$ minutes),
\(\text-2x+1,\!500=6x+300.\)
Solving for $x$ gives us $x=150$ minutes. So after 150 minutes, the number of liters of the first tank is equal to the number of liters of the second tank. But how much water is actually in each tank at that time? Since both tanks have the same number of liters after 150 minutes, we could substitute $x=150$ minutes into either expression.
Using the expression for the first tank, we get $\text-2(150)+1,\!500$ which is equal to $\text-300+1,\!500$, or 1,200 liters.
If we use the expression for the second tank, we get $6(150)+300$, or just $900+300$, which is also 1,200 liters. That means that after 150 minutes, each tank has 1,200 liters.