Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Module 3
Quantitative Ability
Published by IMS Learning Resources Pvt. Ltd. in the Year 2020
Registered Office: 6th Floor, NCL Building, ‘E’ Block, Near Bandra Family Court,
Bandra Kurla Complex (BKC), Bandra (E), Mumbai - 400051
Tel.: +91 22 66170000
Toll Free: 1800-1234-467
CIN : U80220MH1999PTC121823
E-mail : support@imsindia.com Website: www.imsindia.com
All copyrights to this material vests with IMS Learning Resources Pvt. Ltd. No part of this material
either in part or as a whole shall be copied, reprinted, reproduced, sold, distributed or transmitted
in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, or
stored in any retrieval system of any nature without the permission of IMS Learning Resources
Pvt. Ltd., and any such violation would entail initiation of suitable legal proceedings.
The views of and opinions expressed in this book are not necessarily those of the publishers. While
every effort has been made to ensure that all facts are stated correctly, the publishers regret their
inability to accept responsibility for any inadvertent errors or inaccuracies. Readers are advised in
their own interest to reconfirm facts before acting upon them.
The publishers shall endeavour, wherever possible to remedy all errors of commission and omission
which are brought to their attention in subsequent editions.
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, but way of trader or otherwise, be
lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior written consent in any
form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition
including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser and without limiting the rights
under copyright reserved above.
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Ray: A line with one end point is called a ray. The end point is called the origin. Two rays, which
lie on the same line and have only the origin as a common point are called opposite rays. Rays
OA and OB are opposite rays.
B O A
Plane: A plane is a flat surface. It has length and width but no thickness.
Parallel lines: Two lines, which lie in a plane and do not intersect, are called parallel lines. The
distance between two parallel lines is constant. Parallel is indicated by the symbol ||.
Perpendicular lines: Two lines, which lie in a plane and intersect each other at right angles are
called perpendicular lines. Perpendicular is denoted by the symbol .
Note: The concept of right angles will be covered in Angles later in this chapter.
1
CATapult
GEOMETRY
5. There are an infinite number of planes passing through any given line.
6. There is exactly one plane passing through three non-collinear points.
7. A line and a point not on the line lies in one plane.
8. Two distinct intersecting lines lie in a plane.
9. Two or more lines are said to be coplanar if they lie in the same plane, otherwise they
are said to be non-coplanar.
10. Four or more points are said to be coplanar if they lie in the same plane, otherwise they
are said to be non-coplanar.
11. If two points of a line lie in a plane, the whole line lies in the plane.
12. A-P-B implies that the points A, P and B are collinear and P lies in between A and B.
13. The intersection of two planes is a line.
14. A line, which intersects two or more given coplanar lines in distinct points, is called a trans-
versal of the given lines.
Example
In fig (i) below, line is a transversal of lines a, b, c and line a is a transversal of lines and m
15. A line which is perpendicular to a line segment i.e., intersects at 90° and passes through
the midpoint of the segment is called the perpendicular bisector of the segment.
16. Every point on the perpendicular bisector of a segment is equidistant from the two endpoints
of the segment.
P
A O B
Conversely, if any point is equidistant from the two endpoints of the segment, then it must
lie on the perpendicular bisector of the segment.
If PO is the perpendicular bisector of segment AB, then, AP = PB.
Also, if AP = PB, then P lies on the perpendicular bisector of , m
segment AB.
17. If two lines are perpendicular to the same line, they are parallel Q
a
P
to each other.
18. The ratio of intercepts made by three parallel lines on a trans-
versal is equal to the ratio of the corresponding intercepts made b
R S
on any other transversal by the same parallel lines.
If line a || line b || line c and line , and line m are two trans-
QS c
T U
versals, then, PR = .
RT SU
fig (i)
2
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
Angles
THEORY
An angle is the union of two non-collinear rays with a common origin. A
The common origin is called the vertex and the two rays are the sides
of the angle.
Congruent Angles: Two angles are said to be congruent, (denoted by ), if their measures are equal.
Every point on the angle bisector is equidistant from the sides of the
angle. Conversely, if any point in the plane of an angle is equidistant from
O B
the sides of the angle, then it lies on the angle bisector of the angle.
If OX is the angle bisector of AOB then AX = XB. Also, if AX = XB, then X lies on the angle
bisector of AOB.
Types of angles
A right angle is an angle of 90° as shown in fig.(i). Ray OB and Ray OA are perpendicular to each
other.
An angle less than 90° is called an acute angle.
An angle greater than 90° but less than 180° is called an obtuse angle.
An angle of 180° is a straight line.
An angle greater than 180° but less than 360° is called a reflex angle.
fig (ii)
3
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Pairs of Angles
Adjacent Angles: Two angles are called adjacent angles if they have a common
side and their interiors are disjoint i.e., separate.
AOB and BOC are adjacent angles.
Linear Pair: Two angles are said to form a linear pair if they have a common
side and their other two sides are opposite rays. The sum
of the measures of the angles is 180°. The angles that C
form a linear pair are always adjacent.
AOC and COB form a linear pair.
mAOC + mCOB = 180°
A O B
Also, angles of a linear pair are supplementary. (Refer diagram of linear pair
as shown above).
4
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
Corresponding Angles: When two lines are intersected by a transversal, they form A
THEORY
F
four pairs of corresponding angles. B
E
EF and GH are intersected at points B and C by the transversal AD. The four
pairs of corresponding angles are:
When the two parallel lines are intersected by a transversal, the pairs of corresponding angles
so formed are congruent. A
If EF is parallel to GH and AD is the transversal then: E FB
(i) ABE BCG (ii) EBC GCD
(iii) ABF BCH (iv) FBC HCD
G C H
Fig.B
Conversely, if the transversal intersects two lines and if one pair of corresponding angles is congruent
then the two lines are parallel. Hence, when one pair of corresponding angles is congruent, then
all the pairs of corresponding angles are congruent.
Alternate Angles: When two lines are intersected by a transversal, they form two pairs of alternate
angles.
In fig. A, the pairs of alternate angles are:
(i) EBC, BCH (ii) FBC, GCB
When two parallel lines are intersected by a transversal, the pairs of alternate angles so formed
are congruent.
In fig. B:
(i) EBC BCH (ii) FBC GCB
Conversely, if the transversal intersects two lines and if one pair of alternate angles is congruent,
then the two lines are parallel. Hence, when one pair of alternate angles is congruent then the
other pair of alternate and all pairs of corresponding angles are congruent.
Interior Angles: When two lines are intersected by a transversal, they form two pairs of interior
angles.
In fig.A, the pairs of interior angles are:
(i) EBC, GCB (ii) FBC, BCH
When two parallel lines are intersected by a transversal, the pairs of interior angles so formed
are supplementary.
In fig.B:
(i) mEBC + mGCB = 180° (ii) mFBC + mBCH = 180°
5
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Conversely, if the transversal intersects two lines and if one pair of interior angles is supplementary
then the two lines are parallel. Hence, when one pair of interior angles is supplementary, the other
pair is also supplementary and all pairs of alternate and corresponding angles are congruent.
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : From the given figure, calculate a and b. (Given lines l and m are parallel)
6
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
Q : Calculate x.
THEORY
PRACTICE EXERCISE CLASS EXERCISE
A : The sum of all angles = 180° x + 3x + 8x = 180°
12x = 180° x = 15
Q : Find x.
7
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Q : Find x.
A : AB || CD and BC || AD
mCBA + mBAD = 180° (interior angles on same side of the transversal) mBAD = 110°
mBAD = x° (corresponding angles) x° = 110°
8
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
Concept Builder 1
THEORY
1. In the given figure, lines l, m and n are parallel. If PR = 10 and PQ = 4. Find ST : TV.
a b
m
Q T
R V n
2.
x
25° o
z
y
Ray OZ is the bisector of XOY. Find mXOY
3. Measure of an angle is 55°. Find: a) complement of the angle b) supplement of the angle.
4. Line l || line m || line n. Find angles a, b, c, d, e
y P
l
30°
b a
60°
m
c
e
d
Q n
Answer key
9
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Triangles
The plane figure bounded by the union of three lines, which join three non- A
collinear points, is called a triangle. A triangle is denoted by the symbol .
The three non-collinear points are called the vertices of the triangle. In ABC,
A, B and C are the vertices of the triangle. Segment AB, segment BC and
segment AC are the three sides of the triangle.
ABC, BAC and ACB are the three interior angles of the triangle. Sides B C
of ABC can be denoted by a, b, c; where a = side opposite to vertex A, b = side opposite to
vertex B, c = side opposite to vertex C.
The angle formed by extending one side of a triangle with another side is called an exterior angle
of the triangle. A triangle has six exterior angles.
The exterior angles of ABC are FAC, ACD, ECB, CBI, HBA and
BAG.
Here, HBA = CBI, BAG = FAC and ACD = ECB ... [Vertically
opposite angles]
Properties of Triangles
Fig.C
10
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
5. If two sides of a triangle are not congruent, then the angle opposite to the greater side is
THEORY
greater.
In ABC, If AB > AC, then mACB > mABC.
Conversely, if two angles of a triangle are not congruent, then the sides opposite to the
Types of Triangles
1. With regard to their sides, triangles are of three types:
Scalene Triangle: A triangle in which none of the three sides is equal is A
called a scalene triangle.
Isosceles Triangle: A triangle in which at least two sides are equal is
called an isosceles triangle. In an isosceles triangle, the angles opposite to
the congruent sides are congruent. Conversely, if two angles of a triangle
are congruent the sides opposite to them are congruent.
In ABC, AB = AC, mABC = mACB B C
A
Equilateral Triangle: A triangle in which all the three sides are equal
is called an equilateral triangle. In an equilateral triangle, all the angles
are congruent and equal to 60°.
In ABC, AB = BC = AC
mABC = mBCA = mCAB = 60° B C
A
2. With regard to their angles, triangles are of three types.
Right Triangle: If any one angle of a triangle is a right angle, i.e. 90°,
then the triangle is a right angled triangle. The other two angles of the
right-angled triangle will be acute and complementary. The side opposite
to the right angle is called the hypotenuse.
B C
d
In ABC, AC is the
hypotenuse
11
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Acute triangle: If all the three angles of a triangle are acute i.e., less than 90°, then the triangle
is an acute-angled triangle.
Obtuse triangle: If any one angle of a triangle is obtuse i.e., greater than 90°,then the triangle is
an obtuse- angled triangle. The other two angles of the obtuse triangle will be acute.
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : AB = AD, BC = CD, BAD = 100° and DBC = 60°. Calculate ADC and BDC.
12
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
a AD = AB ABD = ADB
THEORY
In ABD, 2ABD + 100° = 180°
2ABD = 80°
Concept Builder 2
70°
B C M
2. In ABC, B = 95°, ACB can be which of the following? A
a) 90° b) 85°
c) 75° d) 95°
95°
B C
A
4. State whether the following are True or False:
a. ACD = ACB + ABC
b. ACD > BAC
c. ACD < CBA
B C D
Answer key
13
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Pythagoras Theorem
A
In an obtuse angled triangle,
AB2 + BC2 < AC2
B C
In an acute angled triangle, A
AB2 + BC2 > AC2
B C
14
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
Congruency of Triangles
THEORY
One-to-one correspondence between triangles: Pairing of vertices of two triangles is called one-
to-one correspondence between vertices, denoted by ‘’ :
B C Q R
Congruence of triangles
For a given correspondence between two triangles, if the sides and angles of one triangle are
congruent to the corresponding sides and angles of the other triangle, then the two triangles are
said to be congruent.
If ABC PQR, then
(i) Side AB Side PQ (iv) ABC PQR
(ii) Side BC Side QR (v) BAC QPR
(iii) Side AC Side PR (vi) ACB PRQ
Tests of Congruency
It is not necessary to list all the six conditions i.e., congruence of the three sides and three angles
to prove that the two triangles are congruent. If certain selected conditions are satisfied, then the
others will necessarily follow. These selected conditions are called the tests of congruence.
15
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Similarity of Triangles
For a given correspondence between two triangles, if the corresponding angles are congruent and
their corresponding sides are in proportion, then the two triangles are said to be similar. Similarity
is denoted by the symbol ‘~’. A
If ABC ~ PQR, then, P
ABC PQR
BAC QPR
BCA QRP
AB = BC = AC B C Q R
PQ QR PR
16
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
THEORY
It is not necessary to list all the conditions for similarity i.e., proportionality of sides and congruence
of angles to prove that two triangles are similar. If certain selected conditions are satisfied, then
A
AA Test: For a given correspondence between two triangles, P
if the two angles of one triangle are congruent to the
corresponding two angles of the other triangle, then the
two triangles are similar.
ABC PQR C B R Q
ACB PRQ
ABC ~ PQR by AA test for similarity.
P
SSS Test: For a given correspondence between two triangles,
if the three sides of one triangle are proportional to the 2y A
2x
corresponding three sides of the other triangle, then the y
x
two triangles are similar.
PQ PR RQ Q R B z C
PQR ~ ABC by SSS test for similarity. 2z
AB = AC = CB
A
SAS Test: For a given correspondence between two
triangles, if the two sides of one triangle are proportional 2x P
to the corresponding two sides of the other triangle and x
the angle included by them are congruent, then the two
triangles are similar. B C Q y R
2y
AB = BC
PQ QR
ABC PQR
ABC ~ PQR by SAS test for similarity.
17
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Concept Builder 3
1. Two congruent triangles have all corresponding sides and angles equal. (True/False)
2.
RQ
In the figure, if AB = AC = then, ABC ~ PQR (True/False)
PR PQ BC
Answer key
18
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
CLASS EXERCISE
Teaser
4 straight lines (without lifting pen from paper) so that they pass through all the 9 dots below:
19
CATapult
GEOMETRY
a) LOM
b) OLN
c) POM
d) NOL
20
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
THEORY
5.
g) If the sides of ∆ ABC are 6, 8 and 10, what kind of triangle will ∆ ABC be?
1) Acute 2) Right 3) Obtuse 4) Cannot be determined
h) If the sides of Δ ABC are 5, 7 and 9, what kind of triangle will ∆ ABC be?
1) Acute 2) Right 3) Obtuse 4) Cannot be determined
i) If A = 30°, B = 80°, and C = 70°, what kind of triangle will ∆ ABC be?
1) Equilateral 2) Isosceles
3) Scalene 4) Cannot be determined
6. Find the hypotenuse of a right angled triangle with perpendicular sides as:
a) 6 and 8 b) 5 and 12 c) 10 and 24
d) 14 and 48 e) *39 and 52 f) * 25 and 60
21
CATapult
GEOMETRY
In any triangle ABC (where a, b and c are the lengths of the sides opposite to A, B and C
respectively) the following properties hold:
• Sum of Angles: The sum of all angles of the triangle is 180° i.e. A + B + C = 180°
• Triangle Inequality: The sum of any two sides exceeds the third (a + b > c, b + c > a,
c + a > b)
• Conversely, the difference of any two sides is less than the third (|a – b| < c, |b – c| <
a, |c – a| < b)
• Exterior Angle Theorem: The exterior angle equals the sum of the remote interior angles
• Theorem of Pythagoras: In a right-angled triangle, the square of the hypotenuse equals
the sum of squares on the other two sides. Hence if A = 90° then a2 = b2 + c2
• Conversely, if a2 = b2 + c2 then A is a right angle (Note: if a2 > b2 + c2 then A is an
obtuse angle while if a2 < b2 + c2 then A is an acute angle)
7. *Consider a triangle ABC (where a, b and c are the lengths of the sides opposite to A, B
and C respectively)
b) If the sides of ABC are 6, 8 and 9, what kind of triangle will ABC be?
1) Acute 2) Right
3) Obtuse 4] Cannot be determined
8. * Find the smallest side of a right triangle whose two larger sides are:
1) 40 and 41 2) 50 and 48
3) 36 and 39 4] 45 and 51
22
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
THEORY
9. In each of the following cases, some
information is given about the sides
23
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Similarity: Two triangles are said to be similar if they are the same in shape.
Tests for similarity include:
• SSS: All three pairs of sides should be in proportion
• SAS: Two pairs of sides should be in proportion, and the included angle should be equal
• AA: Two pairs of angles should be equal
Congruence: Two triangles are said to be congruent if they are the same in shape as well as
size. Tests for congruence include:
• SSS: All three pairs of sides should be equal
• SAS: Two sides should be equal and the included angle should be equal
• ASA: Two angles should be equal and the included side should be equal
• SAA: Two angles should be equal and a non-included side should be equal
• Hypotenuse-Side: Hypotenuses and one pair of sides of two right triangles should be equal
Note that there is no ASS test for congruence
10. In PQR, point S lies on side PQ such that P-S-Q. If mSRQ = mQPR, l(PQ) = 12 and l(QR)
= 8, calculate l(QS).
24
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
Challengers
THEORY
1. In the adjacent figure, all the angles marked with a dot
are equal. Find the measure of angle ABC.
3. All possible obtuse-angled triangles with sides of integer length are constructed, such that
two of the sides have length 5 and 12. How many such triangles exist?
1) 5 2) 6 3) 7 4) 8
5. How many triangles with integer sides p, q, r are possible such that p < q < r and the pe-
rimeter of the triangle is 27?
1) 12 2) 18 3) 15 4) 11
25
CATapult
GEOMETRY
PRACTICE EXERCISE
1. State the measure of the angle (in terms of x), which is the complement of the angle whose
measure is 90° – x.
3.
C D
E
b a
b a
A O B
In the figure, OE and OC are the bisectors of BOD and AOD respectively,
find mEOC.
4.
R
7c 8a
P Q
b 60° 2b
S T
Find a, b and c from the given figure
5.
P A
70°
T C R
B D
26
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
6.
THEORY
R S
P Q
CLASS EXERCISE
A B C D
60 90 120
PRACTICE EXERCISE
In the figure, if PS = 360, find PQ, QR and RS.
7.
A
x 2x
B C D
The interior and its adjacent exterior angle of a triangle are in the ratio
1 : 2. What is the sum of the other two angles of the triangle?
8.
A Q B
a a
P
C b
b R D
In the given figure, find mQPR given that AB || CD, PQ and PR are the bisectors of AQR
and CRQ respectively.
9.
From the information given in the figure, find BAC and XAY.
27
CATapult
GEOMETRY
10. One of the exterior angles of an isosceles triangle is 150°. What is the ratio of its unequal
interior angles?
1) 1 : 4 2) 5 : 2 3) Either (1) or (2) 4) Can’t say
11. In an isosceles triangle, if the vertex angle is increased by 20%, the base angles have to be
reduced by 25% each. The vertex angle, in degrees, is:
1) 80° 2) 90° 3) 100° 4) 110°
12. The two sides of a ABC are 7 and 10. Which of the following cannot be the 3rd side of
ABC?
1) 3 2) 4 3) 5 4) 6
13. The three sides of a PQR are 10, 12 and 20. Which type of triangle it is?
1) Acute Angled Triangle 2) Right Angled Triangle
3) Obtuse Angled Triangle 4) Cannot be determined
14. , and m are two parallel lines 3 cm apart as shown in the figure.
A B C
,
:
10 :
90
m
X O Y
OA is the bisector of BOX and OC is the bisector of BOY. Find ,(BC), if ,(AB) = 5 cm.
1) 3 cm 2) 5 cm 3) 4 cm 4) 20 cm
15. Perimeter of the right angled triangle is 80. Which of the following can be its sides?
1) 18, 25, 37 2) 15, 31, 34
3) 16, 30, 34 4) 11, 34, 35
7 10
y°
x° y°
B 10 C
1) 10 2) 8 3) 7 4) 12
28
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-I 3.1
17. Which of the following is not necessarily true about this figure?
THEORY
A
D E
CLASS EXERCISE
O
B C
1) ADC and AEB are similar
PRACTICE EXERCISE
2) BOD and EOC are similar
3) AD × AB = AC × AE
4) BD × OE = CE × BO
18.
P
S
V
U
X
W
Q T R
19. Amit walks 1 km towards North 2 km towards East, 2 km towards North and 1 km again
towards East in the given order. Sumit walks double the distance than that initially covered
by Amit towards North, half towards East, then half towards North and double towards East
following the same order. If the ratio of speeds of Amit and Sumit is 3 : 2, find the approx-
imate ratio of their distances from their individual starting points when Sumit has covered
half of the total distance.
1) 13 : 3
2) 3.2 : 5
3) 2 : 3
4) Cannot be determined
29
CATapult
GEOMETRY
21. In the adjoining figure, there are three parallel lines and two transversals. AC = 5, DF = 12,
BC = 4. Find EG.
22. The exterior angles of ABC are mentioned in the diagram (all angles in degrees). Find the
measure (in degrees) of CBA + CAB.
30
CATapult
GEOMETRY
and 90°, then the perpendicular sides are 1 times the hypotenuse. In 45°
2
ABC, AB = BC = 1
2
45°
B C
A
Theorem of 30°-60°-90° Triangle: If the angles of a triangle are 30°,
60°
60° and 90°, then the sides opposite to 30° is half the hypotenuse and
Ratio of sides: 1 : 3 : 2
Midpoint Theorem: The segment joining the midpoints of any two sides of
D E
a triangle is parallel to the third side and is half of the third side.
a triangle and intersects the other sides in two distinct points, then the D E
other sides are divided in the same ratio by it.
31
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Altitude (height) of a triangle: The perpendicular drawn from the vertex of a triangle to the
opposite side (base) is called an altitude of the triangle.
D F
B C
E
Fig D
A triangle has three altitudes. In ABC, the three altitudes are AE, BF and CD.
Orthocentre: The point of intersection of the three altitudes of a triangle is called the orthocentre.
The angle made by any side at the orthocentre = 180 – the opposite angle to the side. In fig.D,
O is the orthocentre and mBOC = 180 – mA.
Fig E
Centroid: The point of intersection of the three medians of a triangle is called the centroid. The
centroid divides each median in the ratio 2 : 1.
32
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
THEORY
B
Exterior Angle Bisector Theorem: The angle bisector of
sides.
In ABC, DBC is an exterior angle and BE is the exterior angle bisector. Here, BA = AE
BC CE
A
B C
F
A
Circumcentre: The point of intersection of the perpendicular bisectors
of the sides of a triangle is called the circumcentre.
The perpendiculat bisector of a side does not necessarily pass through
the oppositte vertex in a triangle in general D O E
O is the circumcentre of ABC. The distance of the vertex from the
circumcentre is called the circumradius. OA, OB and OC are the
circumradii of ABC. B C
F
Note: Circumcentre, incentre, circumradii and inradii will be covered later in detail in Chapter
of Circles
Perimeter of a Triangle
33
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Appollonius Theorem: The sum of the squares of any two sides of a triangle is A
equal to twice the sum of the square of the median to the third side and the
Solved Examples
Q :
A
B D C
In a triangle ABC, AB = 9, BC = 10, AC = 13. Find the length of median AD. If G is the
centroid, find ,(GA) and ,(GD).
A : By Appollonius theorem,
AB2 + AC2 = 2 × (AD)2 + 2 × (DC)2
81 + 169 = 2 × (AD)2 + 2 × (5)2
250 = 2 × (AD)2 + 2 × (5)2
125 = AD2 + 25 ...(Dividing by 2)
100 = AD2 10 = AD ,(median) = 10
Since G divides AD in the ratio 2 : 1.
GA = 2 × AD = 2 × 10 = 20 ; GD = 1 × 10 = 10
3 3 3 3 3
33° T
S
78°
Q M R
34
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
THEORY
mPST = mPQM = 69° ...(Corresponding angles)
1 1
ST = 2 × QR = 2 × 10 = 5cm. ...(Midpoint theorem)
Concept Builder 1
1.
A
45°
45°
B C
2.
A
60°
3
30°
B C
35
CATapult
GEOMETRY
3.
A
D E
B C
If DE || BC and D is the mid point of AB, where AB = 10, AE = 6, BC = 8. Find AD, AC, DE
4.
A
6
B E
8
C
5.
Answer key
5. AD = 5 4 : 3 4.
3. AD = 5, AC = 12, DE = 4 BC = 3 3 , AC = 6 2.
1. BC = 6, AC = 6 2
36
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
THEORY
1. If two triangles are similar, Ratio of sides = Ratio of heights P
2. The ratio of the areas of two similar triangles is equal to the ratio of the squares of the
corresponding sides.
If ABC ~ PQR, then
A(3 ABC) (AB) 2 (BC) 2 (AC) 2
= = =
A(3 PQR) (PQ) 2 (QR) 2 (PR) 2
A
3. The triangles on each side of the altitude drawn from the vertex of
the right angle to the hypotenuse are similar to the original triangle
and to each other. ABC ~ ADB ~ BDC
The altitude from the vertex of the right angle to the hypotenuse is
the geometric mean of the segments into which the hypotenuse is D
divided.
In fig.G, (DB)2 = AD × DC
Also, (CB)2 = CA × CD B C
2
(AB) = AD × AC Fig G
37
CATapult
GEOMETRY
SOLVED EXAMPLES
8 = CB = 6
EC 7.5 9
EC = 12 and CB = 5
A(TABC) AB2 c 2 m2 4
Now, = = 3 =
A(TCDE) ED2 9
Area of a Triangle A
The region enclosed within a triangle is called the area of the triangle, denoted
by the symbol A().
c b
Some of the general formulae used in calculating area of a triangle are as below. F E
38
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
THEORY
For an equilateral triangle,
3 3
height = × side; area = × (side)2
2 4
Also, the altitude, median, angle bisector, perpendicular bisector of each base are the same and
the orthocentre, centroid, incentre and circumcentre are the same.
In case of triangles, given the perimeter, an equilateral triangle has maximum area.
Fig F
4. Areas of two triangles having the same base and lying between
the same parallel lines will be equal.
A(ABC) = A(BCD) B C
39
CATapult
GEOMETRY
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : The sides of a triangle are 6 cm., 8 cm. and 10 cm. Find the area, inradius and circumradi-
us of the triangle.
A : s = 6 + 8 + 10 = 12
2
Area = s(s - a)(s - b)(s - c) = 12×6× 4×2 = 24 sq.cm.
A = abc , 24 = 6×8× 10 ; 4R × 24 = 6 × 8 × 10
4R 4R
R = 6×8× 10 = 5 cm.
4 ×24
Q : ABC is right angled at A and AD is the altitude to BC. If ,(AB) = 8 cm and ,(AC) = 15
cm, find ,(BC) and altitude AD. If M is the midpoint of BC, find ,(AM).
A : By the theorem of Pythagoras
,((BC)2) = 82 + 152 = 64 + 225 = 289 cm ,(BC) = 289 = 17 cm
Q : Each side of an equilateral triangle is 2 3 cm. Find its height, area, inradius and circumradius.
3 3
A : Height = × side = ×2 3 = 3cm.
2 2
3 3
Area = ×(side)2 = × 4 × 3 = 3 3 cm2.
4 4
40
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
Q : Area of ABC = 18 sq. cm. D is the midpoint of BC and E is the midpoint of AB.
THEORY
Find A(BDE).
A :
B C
D
A(ADB) = 1 × 18 = 9 sq.cm.
2
Concept Builder 2
1. In ABC, AD is the median and M is the centroid and AD = 15. Find AM and DM
A
B D C
B C
Answer key
2. AD = DC = BD = 5cm
1. 10 and 5
41
CATapult
GEOMETRY
CLASS EXERCISE
Teaser
42
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
• Basic Proportionality Theorem: A line parallel to one side of a triangle divides the other
THEORY
two sides in the same ratio.
• Midpoint Theorem: A segment joining the midpoints of two sides of a triangle is parallel
to the third side and half its length.
Triangles : Elements
• Median : It is a line segment joining the vertex of a triangle with the midpoint of the
side opposite to it. Three medians of a triangle are concurrent and their
point of intersection is called 'centroid'.
• Angle bisector : It is a ray originating at a vertex of a triangle passing through the interior
of the triangle and dividing the angle of a triangle into two angles having
equal measure. Three angle bisectors of a triangle are concurrent and their
point of intersection is called 'incentre'.
• Perpendicular
bisector : It is a line perpendicular to the side of a triangle that divides the side of
the triangle into two equal halves. Three perpendicular bisectors of a tri-
angle are concurrent and their point of interesction is called 'circumcentre'.
2. In the triangle shown in the figure, l(AB) = 6, l(BC) = 7 and l(AC) = 8. Also AD is a perpen-
dicular to BC, AE is an angle bisector of A, and AF is a median of ABC.
a) Find l(BD)
1) 1 2) 1.5
3) 2 4) 2.5
b) Find l(AD)
1) 25 2) 31.25
3) 37.75 4) 33.75
c) Find l(AF)
1) 41 2) 31.25
3) 37.75 4) 33.75
d) Find l(AE)
1) 36 2) 37.25 3) 39.75 4) 33
43
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Special Triangles
4. A triangle VWX has V = 30° and W = 60°. If l(VW) = 10, find l(VX) and l(WX)
5. In the right-angled triangle LMN, l(LM) = l(MN)= 6 cm. Find l(LN) and the area of LMN.
6. An equilateral triangle has perimeter 12 cm. Find its altitude and area.
44
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
The 30° - 60° - 90° Triangle: If the angles of a triangle in order are 30°,
THEORY
60° and 90°, then the sides opposite to them will be in the ratio 1 : 3 : 2
The 45° - 45° - 90° Triangle: If the angles of a triangle in order are 45°,
7. * In Δ FGH, F = 30°, G = 90° and l(FG) = 5.19. What is the area of the triangle?
10. * In a triangle HIJ, H = 30°. If l(HI) = l(IJ) = 12, find the length of HJ.
45
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Triangles: Area
Area of a triangle:
1
Standard Formula: A = × base × height (from the opposite vertex)
2
a+b+c
Heron’s Formula: A = s (s – a) (s – b) (s – c) where s = semi-perimeter = 2
1
For a Right-Angled Triangle: A = × product of perpendicular sides
2
a+b+c
In terms of Inradius: A = r × S where r is the inradius and S the semi-perimeter =
2
abc
In terms of Circumradius: A = where R is the circumradius
4R
Note that two triangles with the same base will have areas proportional to their heights, while
two triangles with the same height will have areas proportional to their bases.
1
In terms of sine of angle: A = ab.sin, where is the angle between two sides having
2
lengths a and b.
a) ABD b) AOB
c) AOF d) AEF
e) DEF f) AED
g) EOF h) o AEOF
46
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
THEORY
Areas of similar triangles are proportional to the square of the ratio of their corresponding sides.
14. Suppose ΔABC and ΔPQR are equilateral triangles such that A (ΔABC) : A(ΔPQR) = 1 : 2. If
, (AB) = 10, calculate , (PQ).
47
CATapult
GEOMETRY
•
When perpendicular BD is drawn on hypotenuse AC of right angled triangle ABC,
1) ABD ~ ACB ~ BCD
2) BD2 = AD × DC ; AB2 = AD × AC ; BC2 = AC × DC
16. If three sides of a triangle are 8, 15 and 17 cm, calculate the distance of the midpoint of
the hypotenuse from the vertex opposite the hypotenuse.
17. What is the ratio of the circumradius to inradius of an isosceles right angled triangle?
48
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
THEORY
• In PQR, PS, QS and RS are angle bisectors, then:
18. I is the incentre of a scalene triangle PQR. m PQR = 50°, m QRP = 60° and m RPQ
= 70°. Calculate
1) m QIR 2) m PIR 3) m PIQ
19. In the figure, AD, BE and CF are altitudes meeting at point O. If mACB = 70° find mAOB
49
CATapult
GEOMETRY
20. ABC is a right angled triangle such that l(AB) = 6, l(BC) = 8 and l(AC) = 10. AD, BE and
CF are the medians of the triangle that intersect at point G. Calculate –
1) l(GD) 2) A(AGC)
50
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
Challengers A
THEORY
1. In the adjacent figure, N and M are midpoints of AC and
BD respectively. BC = 8 units and AD = 6 units. Find length N
2. In triangle ABC, the medians BP and CQ are perpendicular to each other and intersect at R.
If BP = 8 cm and CQ = 12 cm, find the area of triangle ABC.
3. In the given figure ABCD is a quadrilateral with BC = 4 cm and AD = 2 cm. What is the
length of AB (in cm)?
1 4 3 –2
1) 4 – 2)
3 3
+
2 3 1 2 3 –1
3) 4)
2 2
4. In the figure given below, P is a point inside the triangle ABC. Line segments DE, FG and
HI are drawn through P, parallel to the sides AB, BC and
CA respectively. The areas of the three triangles DPG, FPI
and EPH are 9, 16, and 25 respectively. What is the area
of the triangle ABC? (All the areas are in sq cm).
1) 100 2) 144
3) 150 4) 196
51
CATapult
GEOMETRY
PRACTICE EXERCISE
c) By how much does the altitude AD exceed the altitude of an equilateral triangle with base BC ?
52
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
5.
THEORY
CLASS EXERCISE
In DEF, G is the centroid, DE = 7, EF = 8 and DF = 9. Find GP.
1) 7 2) 7 3) 7 4) 14
PRACTICE EXERCISE
3 2 3
B
A 95°
85° 65°
N T
1) 5.5 2) 4.5 3) 28 4) 18
7.
G D
x
6
20 F 22
y 12
E
A B C
In the given figure AG, BF and CD are parallel. Then xy = ?
8.
A
F
E a
b
B D C
53
CATapult
GEOMETRY
1) 7 : 9 2) 5 : 7
3) 2 : 3 4) Cannot be determined
10. ABC is as shown below. BD is the angle bisector of ABC. Which of the following can be
concluded?
A
2x
D x
C x B
11. A ladder resting along the wall at an angle of 45° slides such that it makes an angle of 30°
with the horizontal, as shown. Find xy.
B
x
B’
30° 45°
A’ A O
y
2-1 1- 2 2+1 1+ 2
1) 2) 3) 4)
3- 2 6- 3 3+ 2 6+ 3
54
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
12.
THEORY
E
CLASS EXERCISE
D
C F A
PRACTICE EXERCISE
ABC is right angled triangle at B. EF CA. Find mAEC, if mADB = 55°.
1) 110° 2) 55° 3) 125° 4) 35°
13.
P
G
Q R
X
In PQR, G is the centroid,
PQ = 7.5, QR = 8.0 and PR = 6.5. Find GX ?
1) 1.4 2) 2.5 3) 1.9 4) 1.2
14. Find the maximum area that can be enclosed in a triangle of perimeter 12 cm.
3
1) 4 3 cm2 2) cm2 3) 3 cm2 4) 2 3 cm2
4
15.
A
3
a E
B
2
45°
C 9.66 D
In the given figure BE is parallel to CD. Find area (in sq. units) of the ABE approximately.
1) 12.3 2) 41 3) 6.15 4) 82
55
CATapult
GEOMETRY
16. In ABC, length of side AB is 9 units, that of side BC is 6 units and that of side AC is 5
units. BA is extended to D such that ,(AB) = ,(AD) and BC is extended to E such that ,(BC)
= ,(CE). What is the area of DCE?
5 7
3
What is the area of the figure formed by combining the above triangle and its image?
1) 3(2 + 10 ) sq. units 2) 6(2 + 10 ) sq. units
3) 4(2 + 10 ) sq. units 4) None of these
18. Consider an isosceles triangle with integer sides and perimeter 20. Which of the following
cannot be the length of a side of such a triangle?
1) 4 2) 5 3) 6 4) 7
3
1) 2) 1 3) 3 4) 2
2
56
Chapter QA
TRIANGLES-II 3.2
THEORY
20. PQR is an equilateral triangle. T and U are points on QR such that TU = 1 QR. Another
3
equilateral triangle STU is drawn with TU as base. If PS intersects QR at V and SV = 3, find
CLASS EXERCISE
PS.
PRACTICE EXERCISE
21. In the given triangle, right-angled at B, the angle bisectors of all the angles intersect at I.
Find m BAI.
57
CATapult
GEOMETRY
1) 8 2) 10 3) 12 4) 16
58
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Polygons
Definition of terms
A plane figure formed by three or more non-collinear points joined by line segments is called a
polygon.
Convex polygon D
A polygon, in which none of the interior angles is more than 180° is called a
E C
convex polygon.
A B
Any straight line drawn cutting a convex polygon passes through only two
sides of the polygon.
E
Concave polygon D
A polygon, in which at least one angle is more than 180°, (i.e., a reflex
> 180° C
angle) is called a concave polygon.
A B
E D
In a concave polygon, it is possible to draw lines passing through
more than two sides.
C
A B
59
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Regular polygon: A convex polygon which has all its sides and angles equal B
is called a regular polygon.
Perimeter: The perimeter of a figure is the sum of the lengths of all its sides. A C
Area: The region enclosed within a figure is called its area.
E D
Diagonal
The segment joining any two non-consecutive vertices is called a diagonal.
In the pentagon ABCDE, AC, AD, BE, BD and CE are the diagonals.
n (n - 3)
Number of diagonals of a polygon with n-sides = 2
n (n - 3) 5×2
In the given figure, number of diagonals in ABCDE = 2 = 2 = 5
Properties of a Polygon
1. Sum of all interior angles of a n-gon (polygon of side n) is given by (2n – 4)90° i.e.,(n –
2)180°.
(n - 2) 180°
Hence, each interior angle of a regular n-gon = n
Example
3-2
Equilateral triangle is a regular polygon, with 3 sides where each angle = 3 × 180 = 60°
2. Sum of an interior angle and its adjacent exterior angle is 180°.
3. Sum of all exterior angles of a polygon is 360°.
360°
4. For a regular polygon, each exterior angle = n
5. Area of a regular polygon
B
1
= 2 × perimeter × perpendicular from centre to any side.
Area of pentagon ABCDE
A C
O
1
= 2 × (AB + BC + CD + DE + EA) × OF
E F D
Types of Polygons
Quadrilateral
As defined earlier, a convex polygon of four sides is called a quadrilateral. It is denoted by the
symbol ‘ ’. The sum of the measures of all angles of a quadrilateral is 360°. Quadrilaterals will
be discussed in detail in the next section of this chapter.
60
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
THEORY
pentagon each interior angle is 108° and each exterior angle is 72°.
a a
D
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : The sum of the measures of the angles of regular polygon is 2160°. How many sides does
it have?
2160 = 90(2n – 4)
D E
2n = 24 + 4
n = 14
The polygon has 14 sides.
B C
61
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Concept Builder 2
4. Side of a hexagon is 6 units. Find area of the hexagon and length of the diagonal
Answer key
Diagonal = 12 units
Area = 54 3 sq. units 4.
False 3.
b) 144 a) 140 2.
b) 35 a) 27 1.
62
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
Quadrilaterals
A
THEORY
1 D
Area of a quadrilateral = 2 × one of the diagonals × sum of the
F
perpendicular drawn to that diagonal from the opposite vertices.
1
A( ABCD) = 2 × AC × (BF + DE)
9. Parallelograms that lie on the same base and between the same parallel lines are equal in
area.
10. If a triangle and parallelogram lie on the same base and between the same parallel lines,
1
Area(triangle) = 2 Area(parallelogram)
P Q
11. Diagonals of a parallelogram need not be the angle-bisectors
If any point inside a parallogram is taken and is joined to the
4 vertices the 4 resulting triangles will be such that the sum of
the areas of the opposite triangles is equal. T
63
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Example
ABCD is a parallelogram. mBAD = 30°. BC = 5 cm and DC = 10 cm. Find the area of the
parallelogram.
Rectangle
A parallelogram, in which each angle is a right angle is called a rectangle. Obviously, every rectangle
is a parallelogram.
A B
Properties of Rectangles
1. Opposite sides are parallel and congruent.
2. Each angle is equal to 90°.
3. Diagonals are congruent and bisect each other. D C
4. Perimeter = 2(, + b), where , is the length and b is the breadth.
5. Area = , × b
6. Diagonal = ,2 + b2
Note:
• A parallelogram is a rectangle if its diagonals are congruent.
• The quadrilateral formed by the points of intersection of the angle bisectors of a
parallelogram is a rectangle.
Example
The consecutive angles of a parallelogram are (2x + 30)° and (x + 60)°. What type of quadrilateral
is the parallelogram?
2x + 30 + x + 60 = 180
3x + 90 = 180
90
x = 3 = 30°
(2x + 30)° = 90° and (x + 60)° = 90°
The parallelogram is a rectangle.
64
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
Rhombus
THEORY
A parallelogram in which all sides are congruent is called a rhombus.
Properties of Rhombus
1. Opposite sides are parallel.
SQUARE
A rectangle in which all sides are congruent is called a square. Obviously, every square is a
rhombus, rectangle and parallelogram.
Properties of Square
1. All sides are congruent and opposite sides are parallel.
2. All angles are 90o.
3. The diagonals are congruent and bisect each other at right angles.
4. Perimeter = 4 × side.
1
5. Area = (side)2 = 2 × (diagonal)2
6. Diagonal = 2 × side
Note: A parallelogram is a square if its diagonals are congruent and bisect each other at right
angles.
65
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Example
5
A square swimming pool is surrounded by a footpath 2 m wide. The area of the footpath is 4
times that of the swimming pool. Find the area of the swimming pool.
TRAPEZIUM
A quadrilateral is called a trapezium if two of the opposite sides are parallel but the other two
sides are not parallel.
Properties of Trapezium
1. The segment joining the midpoints of the oblique (non-parallel) sides is called the median of
the trapezium.
1
Median = 2 × sum of the parallel sides D C
1
ABCD is a trapezium, ,(EF) = 2 × [,(DC) + ,(AB)]
E F
1
2. Area of a trapezium = 2 × sum of the parallel sides × height
A B
Note: The trapezium is said to be an isosceles trapezium if the two non-parallel sides are
congruent.
Example
The angles of a ABCD are in the ratio 2 : 3 : 6 : 7. What type of a quadrilateral is it?
2x + 3x + 6x + 7x = 360o
18x = 360o
x = 20o
Measures of angles are 40o, 60o, 120o and 140o.
AB || DC and AD is not parallel to BC
ABCD is a trapezium.
66
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
KITE
THEORY
A quadrilateral is called a kite, if it has two pairs of equal and adjacent sides. B
Properties of a Kite
A E B
H F
A E B
H F
A E B
67
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Concept Builder 2
D C
2. In parallelogram ABCD, x = 25° (True/False)
x
25°
A B
D
3. Find a) Perimeter of parallelogram ABCD C
A 6 B
5. In kite ABCD, C
B
BC = 4 units, AD = 8 units
Find area of the kite.
68
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
THEORY
ABCD = 40 sq.units. Find the length of the diagonal AC. A
E
6
B
C
Answer key
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : If P and Q are the midpoints of sides AB and BC of square ABCD of area 4 cm2. Find the
area of DPQ.
A : Area of square ABCD = 4 cm2
A 2 D
Side of square = 2 cm.
1
(DPQ) = A( ABCD) – A(APD + PBQ + DQC)
P 2
= 4 – b 2 × 1 × 2 + 2 × 1 × 1 + 2 × 1 × 2l
1 1 1
1
69
CATapult
GEOMETRY
70
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
CLASS EXERCISE
Teaser
A farmer has a large L-shaped field which is formed of three square plots as shown below. He
wishes to divide it into four parts such that all four parts are congruent (i.e. of the same shape
and size).
71
CATapult
GEOMETRY
h) The longer diagonal of a kite is the perpendicular bisector of the shorter diagonal
j) On joining the midpoints of the sides of any random quadrilateral in order, we get a paral-
lelogram
k) The area of a parallelogram with diagonals 6 units and 8 units is 24 sq. units.
o) * Of all rectangles with a given perimeter, the square has the largest area
72
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
q) * The area of a parallelogram, having one side of length 7 inches, and a perpendicular
THEORY
distance of 6 inches between that side and its opposite side, is 42 square inches
4. If each interior angle of a regular polygon with n sides measures 144°, find n
5. If three angles of a pentagon are right angles, and the other two measure z° each, find the
value of z.
A
7. Find the sum of measures of all the angles A, B, C, D, E at the
vertices of the figure shown alongside.
B
C
D
180 (n - 2) °
Measure of each interior angle of a regular polygon with n sides = n
Sum of all exterior angles of a polygon with n sides = 360° (independent of n!)
73
CATapult
GEOMETRY
9. * If each exterior angle of a regular polygon with n sides measures 20°, find n
10. A regular hexagon ABCDEF has its centre at O. All the non-adjacent vertices are joined to
form the diagonals as shown in the adjacent figure. Identify the shapes formed by joining
the following sets of points:
A B
a) ACE b) ACDF P
U Q
c) AQDT d) BOF
F O C
e) ABEF f) ACF
T R
S
g) PQRSTU h) APDS
E D
i) AUP j) ABDF
J P K
11. In a square JKLM, P and Q are the midpoints of JK and LM as
shown in the adjoining figure. O is the point of intersection of the
diagonals JL and KM, while N is the point of intersection of JO and N
PM. O
b) Area of POJ
c) Area of KOL
d) Area of JKLM
e) Area of JNM
f) Area of JOQM
74
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
THEORY
8
15
Challengers
1) 18 2) 20 3) 25 4) 21 M
L
G
Data for questions 2 and 3: A regular pentagon ABCDE has sides A
of length 1 cm. Sides AB and DC are extended to meet in a point B
F as shown in the figure. HG is drawn parallel to BC such that it
meets the sides BA and CD (extended) in G and H respectively. E F
C
2. Which of the following is true? D
H
A B
4. ABCD and OMNP are squares of sides 8cm and 7cm respec- M
tively. O is the centre of square ABCD. PQ = 2cm. Find the
area of the shaded region.
O
1) 16 cm2 2) 14 cm2
3) 18 cm2 4) 12 cm2
N
D Q C
75
CATapult
GEOMETRY
PRACTICE EXERCISE-1
1.
A D
20
x 20 20
12
B C
Find the area of the ABCD.
1) 256 sq. units 2) 352 sq. units 3) 269 sq. units 4) 376 sq. units
2. One diagonal of a rhombus is 24 cm and its side is 13 cm. Find the area of the rhombus.
1) 25 sq. cm. 2) 312 sq. cm. 3) 125 sq. cm. 4) 120 sq. cm.
3. Diagonals of a parallelogram are 6 cm and 8 cm respectively. If one side is 5 cm, find its
area.
1) 48 sq. cm. 2) 30 sq. cm. 3) 24 sq. cm. 4) 40 sq. cm.
4.
A B
D C E
C is the midpoint of DE. Area of parallelogram ABCD = 16 sq. cm. Find the area of BCE.
1) 8 sq. cm. 2) 16 sq. cm. 3) 32 sq. cm. 4) 24 sq. cm.
5. In the adjoining figure: If AB, FC and ED are parallel, BC : BD = 2 : 5 and ED = 2AB then
FC : AB = ?
A B
F C
G
E D
1) 5 : 7 2) 7 : 5 3) 3 : 2 4) 2 : 3
76
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
6. A square and a rhombus have the same base and the rhombus is inclined at 45°. What is
THEORY
the ratio of area of the square to that of the area of the rhombus?
1) 1 : 1 2) 1 : 2 3) 2 : 1 4) 1 : 2
CLASS EXERCISE
7.
P Q
4 5
PRACTICE EXERCISE
O 10
S R
T
In the above figure PQRS, is a parallelogram with PQ = 10, QR = 5 and PO = 4. Find ST and
area of PQTS.
1) 8, 12 2) 8, 64 3) 6, 48 4) 6, 24
8. The sum of the measures of the angles of regular polygon is 2340°. How many sides does
it have?
1) 13 2) 14 3) 15 4) 16
9.
A 10 B C
E 5
F D
In the given figure, AC is parallel to FD and FB is parallel to DC. Area of BCDE is 238 sq.
units. ,(AB) = 10 units, ,(BE) = 5 units and ,(EF) = 7 units. Find the area of ABE.
1) 40 sq. units 2) 25 sq. units 3) 50 sq. units 4) 35 sq. units
10. Two squares, with side lengths A and B, where A > B are placed together such that the
right side of the square with side A touches the left side of the square with side B and their
bases are collinear. A line is drawn from the bottom left corner of square A to the top right
corner of squareB. What is the area below the line in the square with side A?
1 A2 B
1) 2 (A + B)B sq. units 2) sq. units
2 (A + B)
1 B2 A
3) 2 (A + B)A sq. units 4) sq. units
2 (A + B)
77
CATapult
GEOMETRY
11.
A a
B
F b
E
D C
x
AB || FE || DC. Find the value of x if A(XABEF) = A(XECDF).
2b - a 4a2 - b2 a+b
1) 2b2 - a2 2) 2 3) 4)
a2 2 ab
12. Alternate vertices of a regular octagon are joined to form a quadrilateral. Find the ratio of
the area of the quadrilateral formed to that of the octagon.
1) 1 : 2 2) 1 : 2 2 3) 1 : 4 2 4) 1 : 2
13. XABCD is an isosceles trapezium. Given that EG || DC, AE || BF, FH || GC and mAEG =
60°, find the area of the shaded region.
A 5 B
10 E F
G
D C
H
25 3
1) 25 3 sq. units 2) 4 3 sq. units 3) 75 3 sq. units 4) 75 4 sq. units
14. The midpoints of all the sides of a regular hexagon are joined to form another smaller hexa-
gon. What percentage of the area of the outer larger hexagon is the area of the inner smaller
hexagon?
15.
Consider the following figure. PQRS is a parallelogram. Point B is on side RS. Diagonal PR
meets segment QB at M. Ratio RB:BS is 4:1. Calculate the area of triangle RMQ (in square
units) if the area of PQRS is 126 sq. units.
78
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
THEORY
16. Consider the triangular grid shown below where each side of each of the small triangles is
of one unit length.
CLASS EXERCISE
A B
PRACTICE EXERCISE
C D
What is the area of rectangle ABCD?
21 3
1) sq. units 2) 12 sq. units
4
15 3
3) sq. units 4) 10.5 sq. units
4
, (AP) 1
17. ABCDEF is a regular hexagon. Point P is a point on side AB such that = . What is
, (PB) 3
the ratio of the area of the hexagon to the area of triangle PED?
1) 3 3 : 2 2) 3 : 1 3) 3 : 2 2 4) Cannot be determined
79
CATapult
GEOMETRY
18. In the following diagram, ABCD is a square while points P and Q lie on sides BC and CD
respectively such that APQ is an equilateral triangle. What is the ratio of the area of square
ABCD to that of equilateral triangle APQ?
A B
D Q C
1+ 3 4+2 3 4+ 3 2+ 3
1) 2) 3) 4)
3 3 2 3 3
19. In the given figure containing all rectangles, AB = 2 cm and BC = 1 cm. Also, the ratio of
the length and breadth of rectangles ABCD, EFGH, IJKL, MNOP and QRST is the same. Find
the length IT.
Q M N R
I E F J
A B
D C
L K
H G
T P O S
1) 65 2) 2 61 3) 2 63 4) 2 65
80
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
THEORY
20. The given figure consists of 4 concentric squares whose sides differ by 2 units. The area (in
square units) of the shaded region is 64 square units. What is the difference in the areas
CLASS EXERCISE
(in square units) of the largest and smallest squares?
PRACTICE EXERCISE
81
CATapult
GEOMETRY
PRACTICE EXERCISE-2
2.
D C
A B
XABCD is a trapezium, AB = 3DC. If A(OCD) = 6 sq. cm, find A(OAB).
1) 54 sq. cm. 2) 27 sq. cm. 3) 18 sq. cm. 4) 108 sq. cm.
3. The rectangular courtyard ABCD of side 50 ft and 42 ft encloses a lawn EFGH surrounded
by a 6ft wide gravel path. Find the cost of spreading gravel along the path if gravelling cost
is Rs.10 per sq. ft.
1) Rs.96 2) Rs.480 3) Rs.51.60 4) Rs.9600
5.
A M B
Q
P
L R N
D K C
ABCD is a parallelogram. M, N, K and L are the midpoints of the sides respectively. PQRS
is the quadrilateral formed by the intersections of AK, BL, CM and DN. Determine the area
of XPQRS if the area of quadrilateral ABCD is 3000 square units, and the areas of XAMQP
and XCKSR are 513 and 388 sq. units, respectively.
1) 599 sq. units 2) 799 sq. units
3) 2099 sq. units 4) 2567 sq. units
82
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
6.
THEORY
6m E F
A B
10m
CLASS EXERCISE
17m
D 12m C
AB and DC are two opposite sides of a road parallel to each other. To cross the road there
are zebra crossings at DE and CF. Somu who is standing at point A is unable to cross the
road to reach point D. So, he crosses the road from E. E is 6 m from A. If he crosses the
PRACTICE EXERCISE
road from A, he covers 10 m to reach D. Kanu who is standing at point B wants to meet
Somu, so she walks 17 m, to reach point C. Now, if Somu and Kanu are 12 m apart, what
is the distance AB and what is the area between the two zebra crossings?
1) 33 m, 96 m2 2) 15 m, 48 m2
3) 27 m, 54 m2 4) None of these
7.
A E B
D C
In the square ABCD, E and F are two points on sides AB and BC respectively such that DE
= DF, then which of the following is false?
1) EB = BF
2) AE = CF
3) Area of XDEBF = Area of XABCD – 2 Area of ADE.
4) Area of ADE = 1 Area of XABCD.
8
8. P, Q, R, S are mid-points of sides AB, BC, CD, AD respectively. PK, QL, RM and SN are bi-
sectors of P, Q, R and S of XPQRS thus formed by joining the mid-points in cyclic
order. K and N are points on the side RQ and L and M are the points on the side SP. If (RM)
= ,(SR) = 12 units, find mSRM.
1) 60° 2) 120° 3) 90° 4) 30°
9. Two regular polygons have their number of sides in ratio 5:3. The difference between their
angles is 8°. How many sides do the polygons have?
1) 25 and 15 2) 30 and 18 3) 35 and 21 4) 20 and 12
83
CATapult
GEOMETRY
10.
A D
G E
B C F
XABCD and XCFEG are squares. ,(HF) = 5 cm, ,(AH) : ,(HF) = 3 : 1
Which of the following could be the value of A(XABCD)? (All sides are integers)
1) 324 cm2 2) 81 cm2 3) 144 cm2 4) 256 cm2
11.
A E B
q
q
D C
XABCD is a parallelogram, ,(AB) = 8 cm, ,(AD) = 4 cm and ,(EC) = 4 cm. If DE is an bi-
sector of ADC then find ,(ED).
1) (2 + 2 3 )cm 2) 4 3 cm 3) 6 3 cm 4) (4 + 3 )cm
12. A regular polygon of 12 sides is formed by cutting off each corner of a hexagon with side
10. Find the perimeter of the 12 sided polygon.
120 120 3 60 3
1) 2) 3) 4) None of these
2+ 3 2+ 3 2+ 3
13. Two congruent rhombi intersect each other such that exactly one pair of parallel sides of one
rhombus is parallel to that of the other. One of their intersection points is the mid-point of
the intersecting sides of both rhombi. If the rhombus has its side equal to 10 cm and one
of its angles is equal to 60°, then find the common area of the quadrangle formed due to
the intersection.
84
Chapter QA
QUADRILATERALS & POLYGONS 3.3
14.
THEORY
A
B
F
CLASS EXERCISE
C E
G D
In the figure, B and D are midpoints of side AC and side CE respectively and FD || BG. Find
the area of the shaded region if A(ACD) = 40 sq. units
PRACTICE EXERCISE
3
3) 35 sq. units 4) Cannot be determined
15. What is the approximate area of the largest regular hexagon that can be inscribed in an
equilateral triangle of each side 9 cm?
16. ABCD and PQRS are two rhombuses. The lengths of their smaller diagonals are in the ratio
3:5. The lengths of the diagonals of ABCD are in the ratio 4:7 and the lengths of the diag-
onals of PQRS are in the ratio 4:5. What is the ratio of the area of ABCD and the area of
PQRS?
1) 13:17 2) 39:47 3) 63:125 4) None of these
17. ABCD is a rhombus. E, F, G and H are the midpoints of DA, AB, BC and CD respectively. I,
J, K and L are the midpoints of EF, FG, GH and HE respectively. The area of the ELI is 2.25
cm2. What is the area (in cm2) of rhombus ABCD?
A
E I F
D L J B
H K G
85
CATapult
GEOMETRY
1) 2x 2) 3
10 x 3) x 5 4) x
3
19. In the following diagram, ABCDEF is a regular hexagon. What is the ratio of the area of the
shaded region to the area of the hexagon?
B
A C
F D
E
1) 1 : 2 2 2) 1 : 3 3) 1 : 3 2 4) 1 : 2 3
20. In quadrilateral ABCD, BO, CO, AP and DP are the angle bisectors of ABC, BCD, EAD and
ADF respectively. What is the relation between BOC and APD?
E
P
A
O F
D
B
C
1) They are equal. 2) They are complementary.
3) They are supplementary. 4) Nothing conclusive can be said
21. Each of the points P, Q, R and S divides a different side of a rectangle ABCD in the ratio 1
: 2 in such a way that PR and QS intersect at a point inside ABCD. Which of the following
cannot be the ratio of the areas of quadrilateral PQRS and rectangle ABCD?
1) 1 : 2 2) 5 : 9 3) 4 : 9 4) 2 : 3
86
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Circle
The set of points in a given plane, which lie at a fixed distance from a fixed point, forms a circle.
The fixed point is called the centre of the circle and the fixed distance is called the radius (r) of
the circle. In the figure, O is the centre of the circle and OR is the radius.
A circle is uniquely determined by three non-collinear points i.e. only one circle passes through
three non-collinear points.
Fig. A
Chord
A chord is a segment whose endpoints lie on the circle. In fig.A, CD is a chord of the circle.
Diameter (d)
The diameter is the chord passing through the centre of the circle. The length of the diameter of
a circle is twice the radius of the circle. In fig.A, PR is a diameter of the circle. The diameter is
the largest chord of a circle.
Circumference (c)
The circumference of a circle is the distance around the circle. It contains 360° at the circle.
The value of the circumference is equal to 2r.
22
c = 2r, where = or 3.14
7
Semicircle
Half of a circle cut off by a diameter is called the semicircle. In fig.A, PAR is a semicircle.
The measure of a semicircle is 180o.
Arc
An arc is a part of a circle. A minor arc is an arc less than the semicircle and a major arc is an
arc greater than a semicircle. In fig.A, arc CMD is a minor arc and arc CAD is a major arc formed
by the chord CD.
87
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Congruent Circles
Circles with equal radii are called congruent circles.
Concentric Circles
Circles lying in the same plane with a common centre are called concentric
circles.
C1 and C2 are concentric circles with the same centre O and radius r1 and
r2, respectively.
Tangent
Tangent is a line in the plane of a circle and having one and only one point
common with the circle. The common point is called the point of contact. In fig.A, line n is a
tangent to the circle and M is the point of contact.
Secant
A secant is a line, which intersects the circle in two distinct points. In fig.A, line , is a secant,
which intersects the circle in points A and B.
Tangent Circles
Circles lying in the same plane and having one and only one point
in common are called tangent circles.
In the given figure, C is the common point of the circles with
centres O and P.
Properties of Chords
1. The perpendicular from the centre of a circle to a chord of the circle bisects the chord.
If OM AB, then AM = MB.
Conversely, the line joining the centre of the circle and the
midpoint of a chord is perpendicular to the chord.
If AM = MB, then OM AB.
88
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
Properties of Tangents
THEORY
1. The tangent at any point of a circle and the radius through
that point are perpendicular to each other. (Tangent Per-
pendicularity Theorem)
Common Tangents
1. If two circles are such that one lies completely inside the other without
touching each other then there will be no tangent common to these
circles.
2. If the two circles touch internally, then they have only one common
tangent. Distance between their centres = difference of the radii.
Distance between centres = AC – BC.
3. For the two circles with centres A and B, PQ and RS are the
direct common tangents, and CD and EF are the transverse
common tangents. (Only two of both transverse common
tangents and direct common tangents are possible.) Where
r1 and r2 are the radii of the two circles.
Length of direct common tangent
=
2 2
(distance between centres) – (r1 – r2)
=
2 2
(distance between centres) – (r1 + r2)
89
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Central Angle
An angle in the plane of the circle with its vertex at the centre is called a
central angle. In figure shown above, AOB is a central angle subtended by
arc ACB at the centre.
Measure of an arc
(i) The measure of a semicircle is 180°.
(ii) The measure of a minor arc is equal to the measure of its central angle.
m(arc ADB) = mAOB
(iii) The measure of a major arc = 360° – (measure of corresponding minor
arc)
m(arc ACB) = 360° – m(arc ADB)
Inscribed Angle
An angle with vertex (C) as a point of the arc other than its endpoints (A and
B) and each side of the angle containing one endpoint (A and B) of the arc is called the angle
inscribed in the arc.
ACB is inscribed in the arc ACB.
Intercepted Arc
An arc is said to be intercepted by an angle if each side of the angle
contains an endpoint of the arc, and the arc but for its endpoints,
lies in the interior of the angle.
Arc BD and arc AC are intercepted by AOC.
90
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
THEORY
1. Inscribed Angle theorem
The measure of an inscribed angle is half the measure of its intercepted
91
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Alternate-Segment theorem
The angle formed by a tangent and secant is half the intercepted arc.
1
mDBA = m(arc BEA) = mACB
2
Important formulae
Area of a circle: The area of a circle = r2
Segment of a circle: A chord of the circle divides the circular region into two
parts called the segments. The part, which contains the centre of the circle, is
called the major segment and the other part is called minor segment.
ACB is a minor segment and ADB is a major segment.
Area of segment = r2 : ri – sini D , where is the measure of the corresponding arc in degrees.
360 2
Also, Area of minor segment = Area of corresponding sector – Area of triangle formed
Area of segment ACB = A(O-ACB) – A(AOB)
Area of major segment = Area of corresponding sector + Area of triangle formed
Area of segment ADB = A(O-ADB) + A(AOB)
92
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
SOLVED EXAMPLES
THEORY
Q : In the figure given alongisde, RS = 12 and radius of the circle is 10.
If C is the centre of the circle, the find PB.
93
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Q : Two parallel chords of a circle are 10 cm and 24 cm in length and they are on the same side
of the centre. If the distance between them is 7 cm, find the
radius of the circle.
A : , (AP) = 12, , (CQ) = 5 (perpendicular from the centre bisects
the chord)
, (OQ)2 = r2 – 25 ... (i)
2 2
, (OP) = r – 144 ... (ii)
, (OQ)2 – , (OP)2 = 119 ... [subtracting (ii) from (i)]
, (OQ + OP)(OQ – OP) = 119
, (OQ + OP) × 7 = 119
, (OQ) + , (OP) = 17 and , (OQ) – , (OP) = 7
, (2(OQ)) = 24 , (OQ) = 12
144 = r2 – 25 169 = r2
r = 13 cm.
Q : Two tangents of length 21 inches from a point P to the circle with centre O are inclined at an
angle of 60°. Find the circumference of the circle. b r = l
22
7
A : AOP BOP ... (SSS test of congruence)
mAPO = mOPB = 30° OAP is a 30°-60°-90°
triangle.
3
Side opposite to 60° = of hypotenuse
2
3 42
21 = × OP OP =
2 3
1 1 42 21
OA = × OP = × =
2 2 3 3
22 21
Circumference = 2 × × = 44 3 inches.
7 3
94
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
THEORY
Find the area of the rectangle.
A : The area will be maximum when the rectangle is a square.
The diagonal of the square = Diameter of the circle = 14 cm.
Q : The circumference of the front wheel of a wagon is 2 ft and that of the back wheel is 3
ft. Find the distance travelled when the front wheel has made 10 more revolutions than the
back wheel.
A : Distance travelled in one revolution = Circumference of the wheel
If the back wheel makes n revolutions
Distance travelled = 2 × (n + 10) = n × 3
2(n + 10) = 3n n = 20
Distance travelled = 20 × 3 = 60 ft.
Q : Find the radius of the circle which has an arc making an angle of 90° at
the centre of the circle and the area of the segment corresponding to this
arc is 28.5 sq cm. (sin90° = 1)
A : Area of segment
= r2 : D
r × 90 1
360 – 2
28.5 = r2 : D = r2 : r – 2 D = r2 1.14
r 1
4 – 2 4 4
4 × 285 × 100
r2 =
114 × 10
2 × 285 × 10
= = 2 × 5 × 10 = 100
57
r = 10 cm.
95
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Q : Find the length of the arc ACB if radius of the circle is 7 cm.
i
A : , (arc ACB) = × 2r
360
90 22
= × 2 × × 7 = 11 cm.
360 7
96
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
Concept Builder
THEORY
1. The circumference of a circle is 16. Find the radius of the circle.
97
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Answer Key
56 sq. units c)
154 sq. units b)
22 units a) 7.
BCA = 40° 4.
d) Radius = 5
c) AM = 4
b) AB = 8
a) ND = 4 2.
Radius = 8 units 1.
98
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
CLASS EXERCISE
Teaser
Preeti has a circular birthday cake. While cutting it, she decides to make only 3 straight cuts. What
is the maximum number of pieces she can cut the cake into?
99
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Circles
100
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
1. Diameter of each wheel of a horse-cart is 1m. If the wheel completes 200 revolutions, what
THEORY
is the distance travelled by the horse-cart?
2. A chariot has two front wheels and two rear wheels. The radius of each rear wheel is 25%
more than that of the front wheel. If the front wheels makes 100 revolutions to travel certain
3. The circle shown in the figure has a radius of 3.5 cm. O is the
centre of the circle and PQ is a chord such that POQ = 60°.
Find
a) The circumference of the circle
b) The area of the circle
c) The length of the minor arc PRQ
d) The area of the sector O-PRQ
e) * The area of the segment PRQ
22
(take = and 3 = 1.73 where necessary)
7
4. Find the area and perimeter of the sector of the circle shown below:
Theorems on chords:
Given a circle with centre O and chords PQ and RS as shown:
• If OA PQ, then l (PA) = l (QA)
The perpendicular from the centre to a chord bisects the chord
• If l (PQ) = l (RS), then l (OA) = l (OB) (where OA and OB are perpendiculars)
Equal chords of a circle are equidistant from the centre
• If l (PQ) = l (RS), then POQ = ROS
Equal chords of a circle subtend equal angles at the centre.
For each of the above theorems, the converse is also true. Hence:
• A line joining the midpoint of the chord to the centre is perpendicular to the chord
• Chords of a circle which are equidistant from the centre are equal in length
• Chords which subtend the same angle at the centre are equal in length
101
CATapult
GEOMETRY
6. * In a circle of radius 65, find the distance from the centre of a chord of length:
1) 32 2) 50 3) 66 4) 78 5) 126
7. In the adjacent figure, two parallel chords KL and MN are drawn in a circle with centre O
and radius 25. If l(KL) = 48 and l(MN) = 40, find the distance between the two chords.
Tangent : If a line touches a circle in one point, that line is said to be a 'tangent' to the circle.
Secant : If a line interescts a circle in two points, that line is said to be a 'secant' to the circle.
8. How many tangents can be drawn from point P to circle Q in the following cases?
9. How many common tangents can be drawn to two circles Q and R in the following cases?
102
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
Theorems on tangents:
THEORY
From an external point, two tangent segments can be drawn
Given a circle with centre O and tangents PA and PB:
10. The circle in the adjacent figure has a radius of 5 and is centred at O. From an external
point P, tangents PA and PB are drawn (A and B are points on the circle)
103
CATapult
GEOMETRY
=
2 2
(distance between centres) – (r1 – r2)
=
2 2
(distance between centres) – (r1 + r2)
12. In the adjacent figure, find the length of the direct common tangent MN to the two circles with
centres O and P and radii ‘R’ and ‘r’, given that the distance between their centres is ‘d’.
13. * In the adjacent figure, find the length of the transverse common tangent ST to the two
circles with centres O and P and radii ‘R’ and ‘r’, given that the distance between their cen-
tres is ‘d’.
14. Two circles with radii 9 and 6 and centres at A and B respectively touch each other externally
as shown in the figure.
104
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
Two direct common tangents PQ and RS are drawn and they meet at C.
THEORY
The transverse common tangent MN is also drawn (where M and N are points on PQ and RS
respectively)
a) Find l(AC)
15. An ant is trying to reach a drop of honey 4 m away. At 1 and 3 m on the straight line joining
the two, there are drops of insect repellant. The and cannot come within 1 m of these. What
is the minimum distance it will have to travel to get the honey?
16.
17.
105
CATapult
GEOMETRY
19. Find the length of the common chord of the two circles of radii 6 cm and 8 cm with their
centres 10 cm apart.
20. In the figure, the perpendicular bisectors of AB, BC and AC meet at point O. If mACB =
70° find mAOB
Alternate-Segment theorem
The angle formed by a tangent and secant is half the intercepted arc.
1
mDBA = m(arc BEA) = mACB
2
21. Line DC is a tangent to a circle touching the circle at D, while DB is a secant, intersecting
the circle at points D and B, as shown. Point E is on line DC extended such that D-C-E, as
shown. If mBCE = 110° and mDBC = 35°, calculate mDAB, if point A lies on the cir-
cumference of the circle.
106
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
Challengers
THEORY
1. A circular table is pushed into the corner of a rectangular room in such a way that it just
touches two adjacent walls. An ant crawling on the table rim (on the minor arc between
2. Three points P, Q and R are taken such that the lengths PQ, QR and PR are 5, 12 and 13 cm
respectively. Semicircular arcs are constructed using the segments
PQ, QR and PR as diameters (as shown in the figure). Find the
area enclosed by the 3 arcs.
1) 30 cm2 2) 36 cm2
3) 30 cm2 4) 12 – 6 3 cm2
3. Two circles of radii 13 and 15 centered at O and P have a common chord MN of length 24.
Find the distance between O and P.
1) 14 2) 13 3) 15 4) Cannot be determined
4. A regular pentagon ABCDE is inscribed in a circle. Point Z lies somewhere on the minor arc
AB. Find mAZB
1) 120° 2) 126° 3) 144° 4) 150°
5. The two adjacent sides of a quadrilateral are 6 cm and 8 cm long. What is the maximum
possible area of the quadrilateral (in sq cm) if it is inscribed in a circle of radius 5 cm?
1) 45 2) 48 3) 49 4) 50
6. In the figure, a regular hexagon is inscribed in a circle and a smaller circle is inscribed in
the hexagon formed by joining its diagonals. If x is the ratio of the
area of the bigger circle to that of the smaller circle, find x.
107
CATapult
GEOMETRY
PRACTICE EXERCISE
DIRECTIONS for questions 1 to 19: Choose the correct alternative.
1. The diameter of the rear wheel of a cart is 1.5 m. In travelling a certain distance the rear
wheel makes 80 revolutions while the front wheel makes 240 revolutions. Find the diameter
of the front wheel.
1) 0.9 m 2) 0.75m 3) 0.5 m 4) 0.66 m
2.
B, O and P are centres of semicircles AXC, AYB and BZC respectively. AC = 14 cm. Find area
of shaded region.
1) 77sq.cm 2) 154 sq.cm 3) 57.35sq.cm 4) 38.5 sq.cm
3.
4. If length of chord AB is 3 times the length of radius of the circle then what will be the
angle inscribed in the arc AB?
1) 60° 2) 120° 3) 60° or 120° 4) None of these
5. A wire of length , cm can form a circle of area 154 cm2 when joined end to end. If a cer-
tain end portion of the wire is cut, it forms a circle of area 38.5 cm2. Find the length of the
portion of the wire which was cut.
1) 11 cm 2) 20 cm 3) 22 cm 4) 44 cm
108
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
6. In a circle with radius 7 units and centre O, the length of a minor arc is 14 units. The area
7. Two circles with diameters 16 cm and 12 cm touch each other internally. Find the distance
between their centres.
1) 10 cm 2) 2 cm 3) 14 cm 4) 3 cm
8.
9.
109
CATapult
GEOMETRY
OPOQ = OAOB = 15
If R = 9 and r = 2, which one of the following relations is true?
1) PQ = 13.3 2) AD = 10.2 3) PQ > AD 4) All of these
11.
A, B, C and D are wheels of equal diameter. A and B are tied with a rope as in
figure 1. C and D are also tied as in figure 2. AB = CD = 2 × diameter of wheels. Two ants
are moving on the marked path as in figure 1 and 2. Find the ratio of the distance covered by
the ants in one round (i.e. ants travelling paths in figure 1 and 2 respectively). (take = 3.14)
1) Less than 0.5 2) Between 0.5 and 1
3) Between 1 & 1.5 4) Greater than 1.5
12. Find the approximate area of the shaded region if the two circles are identical and , (O1O2)
= 3 cm. O1 and O2 are the centres of the circles (O1O2 is the diameter of the circle in the
common area of intersection of circles having centres O1 and O2) .
13. Four 50 paise coins are arranged in a way such that each coin touches two others and the
centres of the coins when joined, form a square. What is the area of the square so formed
that is not covered by the coins? (The maximum distance between any two centres is 392
cm.)
1) 84 cm2 2) 42 cm2 3) 14 cm2 4) 28 cm2
110
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-I 3.4
14. A square gymnasium has a circular swimming pool of area 154 sq. units, at it’s centre. A, B,
1) 400 sq. units 2) 154 sq. units 3) 246 sq. units 4) None of these
15.
In the figure, square ABCD is divided into 5 equal parts all having same area. ‘T’ is central
part is circular and lines AE, BF, CG, DH lie along the diagonals AC and BD of the square.
If , (AB) = 11 cm. Find radius of the circle of central part.
11 21 5r 5r
1) cm 2) cm 3) cm 4) cm
5r 5r 11 21
17. Four dogs are tied with chains of equal length such that the points where they are tied, when
joined, form a square whose side is twice the length of a chain. If the length of a chain is
, units then what is the area enclosed within the square which cannot be accessed by any
dog?
1) (4 – ) , 2 sq. units 2) (2– 4) , 2 sq. units
3) b l , 2 sq. units
2r
4) None of these
3 –1
111
CATapult
GEOMETRY
18. An ant is standing at the centre O of the circle shown here. It needs to reach point C which
is exactly midway between A and B. The ant can move only along the circumference of the
circle and radii OA and OB. What is the ratio of the shortest distance to the longest distance
that the ant can travel in order to reach point C from point O if it is known that it doesn’t
travel along any stretch twice?
1) 1 : 5 2) 3 : 5 3) 21 : 110 4) 43 : 131
19. A circle has a chord of length 20 cm that subtends an angle of 60° at the centre of the
circle. Another circle is drawn with the chord as diameter. Find the approximate area (in cm2)
of the region common to both the circles.
22
Use = and 3 = 1.73.
7
1) 366.67 2) 293.67 3) 193.67 4) 155.67
20. In the given figure, BC is a diameter of the circle with centre O. AB and AC are two equal
chords. Also, POQ = 90°. If the area of ABC = 50 square units, find the area of POQ (in
square units).
112
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Cyclic Quadrilateral
2. An exterior angle of a cyclic quadrilateral is equal to the angle opposite to its adjacent interior
angle. mBCE = mDAB.
3. Ptolemy’s theorem:
In a cyclic quadrilateral the product of diagonals is equal to sum of products its opposite
sides
In the above figure, AC × BD = AB × CD + AD × BC
The converse is also true
a+b+c+d
s = where a, b, c and d are the sides of the quadrilateral.
2
113
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Properties of Secants
114
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
THEORY
PRACTICE EXERCISE CLASS EXERCISE
5. If OC is a tangent and OA is a secant intersecting the circle
at B, then OC2 = OA × OB.
This is called Tangent Secant theorem
115
CATapult
GEOMETRY
In the figure, O is the circumcentre and OA, OB and OC are the circumradii of ABC
By definition area of triangle:
abc
A = , where R circumradius and a, b and c are lengths of sides of a triangle.
4R
abc
circumradius (R) =
4A
Incircle: A circle touching three sides of a triangle internally is called an incircle of the triangle.
The centre of the incircle is called incentre and the radius is called inradius. The incentre is also
the point of intersection of the angle bisectors of the triangle.
The three sides of the triangle are tangents to the circle. The angle subtended at the centre of
the circle by any side of a triangle is equal to the sum of 90o and half the measure of the angle
opposite to that side.
1
mBOC = mA + 90°
2
The incentre, O divides the bisector of A in the ratio (b + c) : a where a, b and c are the length
of BC, AC and AB.
By definition, area of triangle:
A = r × s, where r = inradius and s = semiperimeter
A
Inradius (r) =
s
116
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
THEORY
PRACTICE EXERCISE CLASS EXERCISE
In right angled triangle ABC, the incircle is touching the triangle at D, E, F on AB, AC, BC respectively.
Now, let AD = x, BD = y and CF = z
then AE = x, BF = y, CE = z
Now, inradius, OD = OF = y
Now AB + BC + AC = 2x + 2y + 2z
AB + BC + AC
= x + y + z
2
AB + BC + AC
Now, – AC = (x + y + z) – (x + z) = y = inradius
2
If the measure of the sides of a right angled triangle are given
Inradius = Semiperimeter – hypotenuse
117
CATapult
GEOMETRY
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : Two concentric circles with centre P have radii 6.5 cm and 3.3 cm.
Through a point A of the larger circle, a tangent is drawn to the
smaller circle touching it at B. Find , (AC).
A : mPBC = 90°
(A tangent is perpendicular to the radius at the point of contact)
(6.5)2 = (3.3)2 + (BC)2
(BC)2 = (6.5)2 – (3.3)2 = (6.5 + 3.3)(6.5 – 3.3) = 9.8 × 3.2
BC = 5.6 AC = 2 × 5.6 = 11.2 cm.
118
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
Q : Find the exterior angle at point C i.e., BCE, of a cyclic quadrilateral ABCD inscribed in a
THEORY
circle such that the m(arc BCD) is 240o.
A : m(arc BCD) = 240°
Q : In a ABC, the sum of , (AB) and , (AC) is 8 cm. The radius of the incircle drawn in the ABC,
with centre O, is 2 cm and , (AO) is 4 cm. Find the length of the side BC.
A : Let the incircle touch the sides of the triangle AB, AC & BC in points P, Q & R respectively.
Since OP AB – AP2 + OP2 = AO2 or AP2 + (2)2 = (4)2 or AP2 = 12 or AP = 2 3
AQ = 2 3 .
Also BP = BR and CQ = CR.
BC = BR + CR = BP + CQ
AB + AC = 8 or AP + PB + AQ + QC = 8
BP + CQ = 8 – (AP + AQ) = 8 – 4 3
BC = 8 – 4 3
119
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Concept Builder
1. If PA = 6, PB = 3, CE = 5
Find a) BD b) PE
Answer Key
4. 118
3. ABE = 95°, EBC = 85°
2. 4 units
PE = 9
1. BD = 9
120
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
CLASS EXERCISE
Teaser
In a clock, a mouse standing at the 12 o’clock position runs in a straight line across the face
of the clock to the 7 o’clock position. Then it runs in a straight line from there to the 3 o’clock
position. What angle must it have turned through?
121
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Cyclic Quadrilateral
1. PQRS is a cyclic quadrilateral in a circle with centre O. PQ and SR, when extended, meet at
T. If POR = 100° and PTR = 30°, find QRS
2. PQRS is a cyclic quadrilateral. Point T lies between points P and S on the circle such that
mSTQ = 50°. Calculate mQRS.
3. In the adjoining figure, chord ED is parallel to the diameter AB of the circle. If BCE = 75°,
then what is the value of DEB?
4. In a circle of radius 28 cm, the largest possible hexagon and the largest possible triangle
are inscribed. What is the ratio of their areas?
122
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
Tangential quadrilateral
THEORY
If all the four sides of a quadrilateral are tangent to a circle, that quadrilateral is called 'tangential
quadrilateral'.
5. In the following quadrilateral, l(PQ) = 8, l(QR) = 10, l(RS) = 12. Calculate l(PS).
Theorems on Secants:
If two secants AB and CD intersect each other at a point P outside
the circle as shown, then
• l(PA) × l(PB) = l(PC) × l(PD)
1 1
• APC = m(arc AC) – m(arc BD)
2 2
123
CATapult
GEOMETRY
6. In the adjoining figure, AB, a diameter of the given circle, is extended to a point C. A tan-
gent CE is drawn, touching the circle at D. The measure of BAD is 36°. Find the following
angles:
7. In the adjoining figure, secants AB and CD meet at P, a point outside the circle. AD and BC
intersect inside the circle, in point Q.
8.
O is the centre of the circle. OP = 7.5 cm, AB = 5 cm and radius OT = 4.5 cm. Find PB.
1) 14 cm. 2) 9 cm. 3) 7 cm. 4) 8 cm.
124
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
9.
THEORY
PRACTICE EXERCISE CLASS EXERCISE
ABC is a right angled triangle. A semicircle with centre O is inscribed inside the triangle as
shown in the figure. Find A( ABOD) if , (AB) = 30 units and mC = 30°.
300
1) 300 sq. units 2) sq. units
3
3) 150 3 sq. units 4) 300 3 sq. units
10.
In ABC, , (AB) = , (AC) = 16 cm. Points D, E and F are the midpoints of sides AB, AC and
BC respectively. Find the ratio of area of ADFE to the area of ABC.
1) 1 : 1 2) 1 : 3 3) 1 : 2 4) 2 : 3
11.
Point P is outside the circle of diameter 14 cm as shown in the figure. m(arc AXB) = 60°,
, (DC) = 10 cm, , (PC) = 24 cm, , (PA) = 12 cm and , (PB) = 15 cm. Find the approximate
value of A( ABCD).
1) 120 cm2 2) 131 cm2 3) 97 cm2 4) Data insufficient
125
CATapult
GEOMETRY
13.
3
If ADC is 120°, O is the centre of the circle and OE = and AB and BC are tangents
4
to the circle, what is the length of OB?
3
1) 3 2) 3) 1 4) 2
2
14.
In the figure, two circles with centres P and Q touch each other and the common tangent
from O meets the circles at points A and B. The diameters of the circles are in the ratio 5
: 2 and , (OP) = 35 cm. Find the area of the shaded region.
1) 63 10 cm2 2) 53 10 cm2 3) 90 cm2 4) 40 10 cm2
126
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
Circles: Miscellaneous
THEORY
For questions 15 to 17, refer to the figures below:
16. Find the area of the shaded region in figure (ii). Note that semicircles are drawn with AB,
BC and AC as diameters and ABC is a right angled triangle with AB = 3 cm, BC = 4 cm.
17. Find the area of the shaded region in figure (iii). Note that semicircles are drawn with OP,
OR and PR as diameters and OP = OR = 4 cm.
18. In the given figure, find the radius of the smallest circle if the two larger circles each have
a radius 1.
19. * A square of side 1 is taken. It is circumscribed by a circle. The circle in turn is circum-
scribed by another square. This process is repeated till there are 5 squares. What is the side
of the largest square?
20. * A hexagon of side 1 is taken. It is circumscribed by a circle. The circle in turn is circum-
scribed by another hexagon. This process is repeated till there are 5 hexagons. What is the
side of the largest hexagon?
21. In the adjacent figure, ABCD is an isosceles trapezium. All the circles are of radius = 1 cm
and touch the sides of the trapezium. Find the height of the trapezium.
127
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Challengers
4. ABCD is a square of side 4. A semicircle is drawn inside it with diameter CD. A tangent AE
is drawn from A to the semicircle touching it at E, where E is a point inside the square. AE
is extended to F, where F is a point on side BC. If l(AF) = y, what can be said about y?
1] 3.75 < y ≤ 4.25 2] 4.25 < y ≤ 4.75
3] 4.75 < y ≤ 5.25 4] 5.25 < y ≤ 5.75
128
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
5. * In the adjacent figure, ABCD is a square of side 1. A circle is drawn such that it just
THEORY
touches all the 4 sides of the square (at points E, F, G and H). Also, four circular arcs are
drawn with centres A, B, C and D, and radius 1, as shown in the figure.
129
CATapult
GEOMETRY
PRACTICE EXERCISE-1
DIRECTIONS for questions 1 to 13: Choose the correct alternative.
1.
In the given figure, m(arc PAS) = m(arc SBQ), m(arc PCT) = m(arc TDR) and mQPR = 50°.
Find mUVR.
1) 100° 2) 85° 3) 115° 4) Data insufficient
1) 12 cm 2) 24 cm 3) 35 cm 4) 37 cm
3. ABCDEF is a regular hexagon with sides ‘a’ units. M and N are midpoints of AB and ED. What
is the area of the shaded region?
130
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
4.
5. In the figure not drawn to scale, ABCD is a cyclic quadrilateral while ABF and CEF are
similar triangles. Which of the following, cannot be the value of mBAC, if mBEC = 30°?
6.
AB and CD are two arcs of the circle with centre O. AC is joined and extended to meet the
line, which is an extension of BD at P. Find mCPD.
1) 5° 2) 10° 3) 15° 4) 30°
131
CATapult
GEOMETRY
7. Two circles with centres at O and P intersect each other at points A and B such that mAOB
= 60°, r1 = 21 units and r2 = 7 3 units. NM and QM are tangents to the smaller circle.
What is the area of the shaded region?
8.
In rectangle ABCD, M is the midpoint of AB. A square PQRS is inscribed in a circle such that
it touches MD, BC and DC. What is the area of the shaded region?
1) (4 – 8) sq. units 2) (4 – 6) sq. units
3) (8 – 4) sq. units 4) (8 – 6) sq. units
9. If the areas of circles with centres O1 and O2 are equal and that of circles with centres O3
and O4 are equal, then calculate the area of the shaded region if the radius of the circle
with centre O1 = 7 cm.
132
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
10.
11.
In the given figure, not drawn to scale, mAOC = 120°. O is the centre of the circle and
ABCD is a square. Find , (DP) : , (PC).
1) 2 : ^1 + 3 h 2) ^ 3 + 1h : 3
3) 1 : ^ 3 – 1 h 4) 3 : ^1 + 2 h
12.
In the given figure, not drawn to scale, BC is tangent to the circle at D and AD passes through
the centre of the circle such that , (AD) : , (BD) : , (DC) = 3 : 1 : 3. Find the ratio of area
of AEF to that of ABC.
1) 3 : 16 2) 1 : 4 3) 3 : 8 4) 2 : 5
133
CATapult
GEOMETRY
13. Let AB be a diameter of a circle. Point C divides diameter AB in the ratio 1 : 2. Let DE be
another diameter of the circle such that DE is perpendicular to AB. What is the ratio of the
area of DCE to area of ABD?
1) 1 : 2 2) 1 : 4 3) 1 : 6 4) 1 : 3
14. In the given figure, the two circles touch each other internally such that the diameter of the
inner circle is two-thirds the diameter of the outer circle. CD, PA and PB are tangents to the
inner circle. What is the ratio of the areas of PMN and the smaller circle?
r 3 1
1) 3r 2) 3) 4)
3 r 3r
15. AB = 12 cm is a diameter of a circle with centre O. Another circle touches the given circle
internally at B and passes through O. If C is a point on the larger circle such that AC is a
tangent to the smaller circle at D, then find AC (in cm).
1) 6 2 2) 9 3) 8 2 4) 3 15
16. The largest possible square is drawn inside a circle of radius 6 units. An equilateral trian-
gle is drawn inside the square with one of the sides of the square as its base. The largest
possible circle is drawn inside this equilateral triangle. What is the distance between the
centres of the two circles?
1) 2 + 1 2) 3 3) 3 – 1 4) 2
134
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
17. In the following diagram, two tangent segments PQ and PR of length 12 cm each are drawn
1) 7.5 cm 2) 4.5 cm
3) 6 cm 4) Cannot be determined
18. ABCD and EFGH are two rectangles such that the points A, B, C, D, E, F, G and H all lie on
a circle. The ratio of the areas of rectangles ABCD and EFGH is 75 : 42. If AB = 15 and
EH = 7, find the area (in square units) of the circle that passes through A, B, C, D, E, F, G
and H.
625
1) 2) 100 3) 144 4) 625
4
135
CATapult
GEOMETRY
19. In the following diagram, point E is on the extended side DC of the quadrilateral such that
mDAB = mBCE = 76°. Point P lies in the interior of the quadrilateral such that ,(PA) =
,(PB) = ,(PD) = 4 cm. What is ,(PC)?
B
E
D C
1) 4 3 cm
2) 2 cm
3) 4 cm
4) More information is needed to answer this question
20. In the given figure, the angle bisectors of all the three angles of the equilateral triangle ABC
meet at D. A circle is drawn with CD as diameter. Find the area (in square units) of the
shaded region if the length of each side of ABC = 14 3 units.
c m 2) 49 b 3l 3) 49 b l 4) 49 c 2r – m
49 2r 3 2r 2r 1 3
1)
2 3 – 2 3 – 3 – 2 3 2
136
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
PRACTICE EXERCISE-2
1. In the following figure, five circles are adjacent to one another and have lines L1 and L2 as
common tangents. If the radius of the largest circle is 18 units and that of the smallest circle
is 8 units, what is the radius of the middle circle?
2. Find the ratio of the area of the largest triangle that can be inscribed in a circle of radius 7
cm to the area of the largest triangle that can be inscribed in a semicircle of radius 7 cm.
1] 3 : 4 2] 3 : 4 3] 3 3 : 2 4] None of these
3. AB is the line joining the points of intersection of a semicircle and a circle as shown in the
figure. , (AB) = m. Find the area of a circle with radius AB.
1) 40 sq. units 2) 80 sq. units 3) 120 sq. units 4) 160 sq. units
137
CATapult
GEOMETRY
DIRECTIONS for questions 4 and 5: Refer to the data below and answer the questions that
follow.
In a village, there are two circular and concentric ring roads as shown. The inner ring road has a
circumference equal to half that of the outer ring road. The village has four headmen (HMs) and
four chiefs (Ls). The positions of their houses are marked on the figure.
A vehicle can move at the rate of 40 kmph on the inner ring road, 60 kmph on the outer ring
road and 30 5 kmph on the chord roads.
4. I am in L3’s house and want to go to HM1’s house. If I take the route from L3 to L2 along
the outer ring road and then take the chord road from L2 to HM1, I will take a total of 3
hours to reach my destination. What is the radius of the outer ring road in km?
1) 30 km 2) 40 km 3) 60 km 4) 80 km 5) 120 km
5. A car wants to reach HM2 from L1 using first, the chord L1HM4 and then, the inner ring road.
How many minutes will it take? (Use the data from the previous question)
1) 120 min 2) 90 min 3) 180 min
4) 210 min 5) None of these
6. Mohanlal has a field having dimensions as given in the figure. He has four horses and four
ropes of lengths 12, 16, 24, 28 metres. What can be the minimum area which will remain
ungrazed, if they are tied to the corners A, B, C and D using the four ropes such that no
two horses ever come in contact?
138
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
7. A circle is inscribed in a given square and another circle is circumscribed about the square.
8. A one-rupee coin is placed on a table. The maximum number of similar one-rupee coins
which can be placed on the table, around it, with each one of them touching it and only two
others is _____.
1) 8 2) 6 3) 10 4) 4
9. The line AB is 6 m in length and is tangent to the inner one of the two concentric circles
at point C. It is known that the radii of the two circles are integers. The radius of the outer
is:
1) 5 m 2) 4 m 3) 6 m 4) 3 m
10. PQRS is a square. SR is a tangent at point S to the circle with centre O and TR = OS. Then,
the ratio of area of the circle to the area of the square is _____.
r 11 3 7
1) 2) 3) 4)
3 7 r 11
139
CATapult
GEOMETRY
11. In the given figure, AB is diameter of the circle and the points C and D are on the circum-
ference such that CAD = 30° and CBA = 70°.
12. From a circular sheet of paper of radius 20 cm, four circles, each of radius 5 cm are cut out
What is the ratio of the areas of the uncut to the cut portion of the sheet?
1) 1 : 3 2) 4 : 1 3) 3 : 1 4) 4 : 3
13. The figure shows a circle of diameter AB and radius 6.5 cm. If chord CA is 5 cm long, find
the area of the triangle ABC.
14. The figure shows the rectangle ABCD with a semi-circle and a circle inscribed inside it. What
is the ratio of the area of the circle to that of the semi-circle?
^ 2 – 1h
2
2 2
1) ( 2 – 1) 2) 2( 2 – 1) 3) 4) None of these
2
140
Chapter QA
CIRCLES-II 3.5
15. In the adjoining figure, points A, B, C and D lie on the circle. AD = 24 and BC = 12. What
1) 1 : 4 2) 1 : 2 3) 1 : 3 4) Insufficient data
16. AB is the diameter of the given circle, while points C and D lie on the circumference as
shown. If AB is 15 cm, AC is 12 cm and BD is 9 cm, find the area of the quadrilateral ACBD.
17. The sum of the areas of two circles which touch each other externally is 153. If the sum
of their radii is 15, find the ratio of the larger to the smaller radius.
1) 4 : 1 2) 2 : 1 3) 3 : 1 4) None of these
18. Three circles, each of radius 20 cm and have their centres at P, Q and R. Further, AB = 5
cm, CD = 10 cm and EF = 12 cm. What is the perimeter of the triangle PQR?
1) 120 cm 2) 66 cm 3) 93 cm 4) 87 cm
141
CATapult
GEOMETRY
19. Four identical coins are placed in a square. For each coin the ratio of numerical value of
area (in sq. units) to numerical value of circumference (in units) is the same as the ratio of
numerical value of circumference (in units) to numerical value of area (in sq. units). Find the
area of the square that is not covered by the coins.
4) 16 b 4 – l
r
1) 16( – 2) 2) 16( – 2) 3) 16(4 – )
2
20. The figure below shows two concentric circles with centre O. PQRS is a square, inscribed in
the outer circle. It also circumscribes the inner circle, touching it at points B, C, D and A.
What is the ratio of the perimeter of the outer circle to that of polygon XABCD?
r 3r r
1) 2) 3) 4)
4 2 2
142
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Definition of Terms
Mensuration deals with the measurement of areas and volumes of plane and solid figures.
Solids: Solids are three-dimensional objects, bound by one or more surfaces. When plane surfaces
bound a solid, they are called its faces. The lines of intersection of adjacent faces are called its
edges. The points of intersection of the edges are called vertices.
Euler’s Formula
For any regular solid,
However this does not hold for a solid with curved surface.
Volume of a solid figure is the amount of space enclosed by its bounding surfaces. Volume is
measured in cubic units.
143
CATapult
GEOMETRY
A cuboid has,
8 vertices i.e., A, B, C, D, E, F, G and H.
12 edges i.e., AE, AB, AD, BF, BC, FE, FG, EH, DH, DC, CG and GH.
2 horizontal faces; AEFB, DHGC.
4 vertical faces; AEHD, ABCD, BFGC and EFGH.
4 body diagonals; DF, EC, AG and HB.
DC is the length of the cuboid ( , ).
DH is the breadth of the cuboid (b).
DA is the height of the cuboid (h).
CUBE: A cube is a special case of a parallelopiped in which the length, breadth and height are
equal i.e., it is bound by six square faces.
Right PRISM: A prism is a solid, whose top and bottom faces are identical polygons and parallel.
Their vertical faces are rectangular.
A prism is said to be triangular prism, quadrilateral prism pentagonal prism, hexagonal prism,
octagonal prism according to the number of sides of the polygon that form the base.
In a prism with a base of n sides, Number of vertices = 2n, Number of faces = n + 2.
Cube and Cuboids are prisms with a square and rectangle as a base respectively
144
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
THEORY
PRACTICE EXERCISE CLASS EXERCISE
Triangular Prism Pentagonal Prism Hexagonal Prism
In the figure above, OO’ is the perpendiclar height (h) of the prism
Example
In a equilateral triangular prism, the side of base is equal to 6 units. The height of the prism is
8 units. Find the volume, L.S.A. and T.S.A. of the prism.
Lateral Surface Area = Base perimeter × height
= (3 × 6) × 8
= 144 sq. units
Total Surface Area = L.S.A + 2 × Area of base
3
= 144 + 2 × × 62
4
= 144 + 18 3 sq.units
Volume = Area of base × height
= 18 3 × 8
= 144 3 cubic. units
Right Circular CYLINDER: The base and upper face of a right circular cylinder are equal circular
regions lying in parallel planes. The perpendicular distance between these parallel faces is the
height of the cylinder.
If r is the radius of the base and h is the height of the cylinder
The vertical surface of the cylinder is a curved surface.
C.S.A of a cylinder = perimeter of base × height = 2rh
T.S.A of a cylinder = C.S.A + 2 × B.ase Area = 2rh + 2 × r2 = 2r(r + h)
Volume of a cylinder = Area of base × height = r2h
Volume of material of a hollow cylinder = (R2 – r2)h
where, R is the outer radius and r is the inner radius of the cylinder.
145
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Example
The radius of a right circular cylinder is increased by 50%. Find the percentage increase in volume.
Let the original radius be r and height be h.
New radius = 1.5r
Inscrease in volume
Percentage Increase in volume = × 100
Original volume
2 2 2 2
r (1.5r) h – rr h 2.25rr h – rr h
= 2 × 100 = 2 × 100
rr h rr h
2
rr h (2.25 – 1)
= 2 × 100 = 1.25 × 100 = 125.
rr h
Right Circular CONE: The base of a right circular cone is a circular region.
A is the centre of the circle and OA AB where O is the vertex of the cone and AB is the radius (r).
OA is the perpendicular height (h) of the cone (i.e., the segment
joining the vertex of the cone and the centre of the base). OB is the slant
height ( , ) of the cone (i.e., a segment joining the vertex of the cone and any
point on the circumference of the base).
Slant height, , =
2 2
r +h
Curved surface area = r ,
Total surface area = r (r + , )
1 1
Volume of cone = × Volume of cylinder = × r2h.
3 3
Example
Find the volume of the largest right circular cone that can be cut out of a cube of edge 42 cm.
The base of the cone will be a circle inscribed in a face of the cube and its height will be equal
to the edge of the cube.
Radius of cone = 21 cm.
Height = 42 cm.
1
Volume of cone = r2h
3
1 22
= × × 21 × 21 × 42 = 19404 cu. cm.
3 7
146
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
FRUSTUM OF A CONE: A frustum is the lower part of a cone, containing the base, when it is cut
THEORY
by a plane parallel to the base of the cone.
Slant height, , =
2 2
h + (R – r)
SPHERE: The set of all points in space, which are at a fixed distance
from a fixed point, is called a sphere.
The fixed point is the centre of the sphere and the fixed distance is
the radius of the sphere.
HEMISPHERE: A sphere cut by a plane passing through its centre forms two hemispheres. The
upper surface of a hemisphere is a circular region.
Example
A toy has a hemispherical base and a conical top as shown in the figure. The perpendicular height
of the cone is 10 cm and radius of the hemisphere is 4 cm. Find the volume of the toy.
147
CATapult
GEOMETRY
SPHERICAL SHELL: If R and r are the outer and inner radii respectively of a hollow sphere, then
4
Volume of material in a Spherical Shell = (R3 – r3).
3
SOLID RING: If R and r are the outer and inner radii of a solid ring
(can be considered as a cylindrical rod joined end to end), then
2
r
Volume = (R – r)2(R + r).
4
Curved Surface area = 2(R2 – r2).
PYRAMID: A pyramid is a solid, whose base is a polygon and lateral faces are triangular with a
common vertex.
A pyramid is said to be tetrahedron (triangular base), square pyramid, hexagonal pyramid etc.,
according to the number of sides of the polygon that form the base.
In the above figures, O is the common vertex and OO' is the perpendicular height (h) of the pyramid.
The distance measured along the lateral face from the base to the apex or common vertex (O)
along the center of the face is called the slant height of the pyramid ( , ). In other words, it is
the altitude of the triangle comprising the lateral face.
148
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
THEORY
Number of vertices = n + 1; Number of faces including the base = n + 1.
1
Surface area of lateral faces = × perimeter of base × slant height
2
Concept Builder
1. A solid with 8 faces has 16 edges. What are the number of vertices of the solid
2. The height of a right prism is 8 units.
a) Find the L.S.A if perimeter of base is 10 units
b) Area of base, if volume = 320 cubic units.
3. A cuboid of dimensions 2 unit × 4 unit × 8 units is melted in to a cube. Find
a) Volume of cuboid
b) Surface area of cuboid
c) Length of the diagonal of cuboid
d) Volume of cuboid = Volume of the new cube (T/F)
e) Side of the new cube
f) Surface area of the cube
g) Length of diagonal of the cube
4. The radius and height of a cylinder are 7cm and 10cm respectively. Find
a) C.S.A b) T.S.A c) Volume
5. A tetrahedron (with equilateral triangular base) with side 6 cm has slant height of 7cm.
Find a) L.S.A b) T.S.A
6. Find the volume, C.S.A, T.S.A of a right circular cone of height and radius 4 and 3
respectively.
7. The radius of sphere is 9 and that of a hemisphere is 6 units. Find the ratio of their
volumes and ratio of their T.S.A’s
8. Find the Slant height, volume, curved S.A., T.S.A of the given frustum
Answer Key
T.S..A = (64 10 + 136)
8. Slant height = 4 10 , V = 784, C.S.A = 64 10 r
TSA = 3 : 1
4
6. CSA = 15, TSA = 24, Volume = 12 7. Volume =
27
b) 63 + 9 3 a) 63 c) 490 5. b) 238 a) 140 4.
f) 96 g) 4 3 e) 4 c) 2 21 d) T b) 112 a) 64 3.
b) 40 a) 80 2.
10 1.
149
CATapult
GEOMETRY
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : A road roller of diameter 1.75 m and length 1 m has to press a ground of area 1100 sq.
meter. How many revolutions does it make?
= 200.
Q : A rectangle 7 cm × 5 cm is rotated about its smaller edge as axis. Find the curved surface
area and volume of solid generated.
22
A : Curved Surface area = 2rh = 2 × × 7 × 5
7
= 220 sq. cm.
22
= × 7 × 7 × 5 = 770 cu. cm.
7
Q : The perpendicular sides of the base of a right triangular metallic pyramid are 6 cm and 8 cm.
It weighs 810 g. Find its height, if density of the metal is 13.5 g/cc.
Weight 810g
A : Volume = = = 60 cc
Density 13.5g/cc
1
Volume = Base area × height
3
1 1
60 = × × 6 × 8 × height Height = 7.5 cm.
3 2
150
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
Q : A rectangular sheet of paper of length 8 cm and breadth 22 cm is rolled end to end to form
THEORY
a right circular cylinder of height 8 cm. Find the volume of
the cylinder.
A : Circumference = 22 cm i.e., 2r = 22 cm.
Q : A regular hexagonal prism has perimeter of its base as 600 cm and height equal to 200 cm.
How many litres of petrol can it hold? Find the weight of petrol if density is 0.8gm/cc.
Perimeter 600
A : Side of hexagon = = = 100 cm.
Number of sides 6
3 3
Area of regular hexagon = × 100 × 100 = 25950 sq. cm.
2
Volume = Base Area × height = 25950 × 200 = 5190000 cu. cm = 5.19 cu.m.
Weight of petrol = Volume × Density = 5190000 cc × 0.8 gm/cc = 4152000 gm = 4152 kg.
Q : A solid metallic right circular cone of height 45 cm and radius 15 cm is melted and two solid
cylinders of height 15 cm are prepared. If the volume of one is 8 times that of the other, find
the radius of smaller one.
A : Volume of cone = Volume of smaller cylinder + 8 times of volume of the smaller cylinder =
9 times volume of smaller cylinder.
1
× 45 × 15 × 15 = 9 × × r2 × 15
3
45 × 15 × 15
r2 =
9 × 3 × 15
r = 5 cm.
151
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Q :
An iron ball of diameter 6 inches is dropped into a cylindrical vessel of diameter 1 ft filled
with water. Find the rise in water level. (Assume density of water and material used in sphere
is the same)
1 feet 12 inches
A : Radius of vessel = = = 6 inches.
2 2
Volume of water that has risen = Volume of sphere
4 2
R2h = r
3
4
(6)2 × h = × 33
3
4
36 × h = × 33
3
h = 1 inch.
152
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
CLASS EXERCISE
Teaser
A cube is painted with six different colours on its six faces (red, yellow, blue, green, black and
purple). Then it is cut into 125 identical smaller cubes. How many of these cubes will have:
a) No face painted?
b) One face blue and exactly one other face painted?
c) One face purple and at least one other face painted?
d) One face red and one face yellow?
153
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Prisms
The following table gives the general formulae for a right prism and some examples of prisms
3. * An open jewelry box in the shape of a square-based prism has a base side of length 5
inches and a height of 4 inches. The walls are of negligible thickness.
a) What is the capacity of the box in cubic inches?
b) What is the cost of painting the surface of the box at a cost of 20 paise per square inch?
154
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
Pyramids
THEORY
4. A square pyramid is discovered in Egypt with a base of 60 m and
a height of 40 m.
A pyramid is a polyhedron formed by connecting the vertices of a polygonal figure (the base)
with a point (the vertex) outside the plane of the base. (A cone also can be considered pyramidal
in nature).
The following table gives the general formulae for a right pyramid (with a regular polygonal
base), and some examples of pyramids
6. * An ice-cream cone has a radius of 42 mm and a height of 100 mm. The seller claims that
the cone contains 200 ml of ice-cream. Is he telling the truth? (Note: 1 ml = 1 cubic cm)
155
CATapult
GEOMETRY
8. A hemisphere of radius 14 is melted down and formed into 4 smaller identical spheres.
a) What is the radius of each smaller sphere?
b) What is the ratio of the new total volume to the original total volume?
c) What is the ratio of the new total surface area to the original surface area?
9. A cone of base radius 7 cm and height 24 cm is cut parallel to the base to form a frustum
or truncated cone. If the cut is made:
a) at a distance of 6 cm from the vertex, find the volume of the frustum formed.
b) at a distance of 4 cm from the base, find the ratio of the volumes of the two parts formed.
c) at a distance of 12 cm from the vertex, find the upper radius of the frustum formed.
d) at a distance of 4.8 cm from the base, find the slant height of the frustum so formed
Other standard figures which are neither pyramidal nor prismatic include the sphere (and hemisphere),
and the frustum or truncated pyramid.
The following table gives general formulae for spheres, hemispheres and conical frustums:
Note that in many cases it is far easier to use the basic principles of similarity of figures to solve
problems involving frustums, rather than applying a cumbersome formula.
156
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
Compound Figures
THEORY
11. A cube of side 3 inches is taken and a hole of circular cross-section, with diameter 1 inch,
is drilled right through from the centre of one face to the centre of the opposite face. Find
12. A child’s spinning top is made in the shape of a cylinder of radius ‘r’ and length ‘l’, topped
at each end by a cone of base radius ‘r’ and height ‘l’
as shown in the figure. Find:
a) The volume of the top
b) The surface area of the top
13. What is the maximum possible volume of a sphere that can fit inside:
a) A cube of side 6 cm
b) A prism of height 8 cm whose base is an equilateral triangle of side 6 cm
14. * What is the maximum possible volume of a cube that can fit inside:
a) A sphere of radius 6 cm
b) A cylinder of radius 6 cm and height 8 cm
15. * Find the volume and surface area of the adjoining figure if each of the small cubes has a
side of length 1 cm, and each cube in an upper
layer has a cube below it.
157
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Challengers
1) A metal cylinder of radius 12 cm and height 16 cm is melted down and formed into identical
smaller spheres of radius 3 cm.
a) How many smaller spheres are formed?
1) 48 2) 54 3) 72 4) 64
2) A right-angled connector made of rubber can be used to connect two hose-pipes. If the
connector has an outer diameter of 1 cm, a length of 2.5 cm
and a thickness of 1 mm, find the volume of rubber used in its
construction.
1) 1.44 cc 2) 18 cc
(5 + 2 3) r
3) cc 4) 0.36 cc
16
3. There is a cube with sides of length 5 units. An ant on one vertex wants to reach the far-
thest (opposite) vertex, traversing the minimum distance in the process. How far will it have
to crawl?
1) 15 2) 5 ^ 2 + 1 h 3) 5 5 4) 5 3
4. A cone and a sphere have equal heights and equal volumes. Find the ratio of their radii.
1) 1 : 1 2) 2 : 1 3) 3 : 1 4) 2 : 1
5. * The ticket for the Chess World Cup final is in the shape of a regular hexagon, with a side
of 6 inches. A circular stamp, of radius 2 inches, is meant to be used
to stamp the ticket in the centre. By mistake, the stamp get misaligned
and stamps the ticket in such a way that the edge of the stamp ex-
actly touches a vertex of the hexagon, while the centre of the stamp
lies on the line joining that vertex to the opposite vertex (as shown in
the figure). Find the portion of the stamp, in square inches, which falls
outside the ticket.
4 3 4 3
1) – 2 3 2) 4 – 3) – 3 4) 2 –
3 2 3 2
158
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
PRACTICE EXERCISE-1
DIRECTIONS for questions 1 to 14: Choose the correct alternative.
1. Find the length of the longest rod that can be fit into a box of dimensions 6 cm × 3 cm ×
2 cm.
1) 45 cm 2) 7.8 cm 3) 7 cm 4) 8 cm
2. The lower part of a tent is a circular cylinder and its upper part is a right cone. The diameter
of the base is 70 m. The total height is 15 m and the height of the cylindrical part is 3 m.
Find the cost of canvas required at Rs.10 per sq. m.
1) Rs.47300 2) Rs.162800
3) Rs.16280 4) Rs.44000
3. A thermal chimney of circular cross section has outer and inner radii 3 m and 2 m respec-
tively. Find the cost of cement finishing for the the inner and outer surface at Rs.20 per sq.
meter, if the height of the chimney is 56 m.
1) Rs.80000 2) Rs.45760 3) Rs.35200 4) Rs.7040
4. Water flows out at the rate of 10 m/minute from a cylindrical pipe of diameter 5 mm. Find
the time taken to fill a conical tank whose diameter at the base is 40 cm and depth is 24
cm.
1) 153.6 minutes 2) 51.2 minutes 3) 12.8 minutes 4) 128 minutes
5. The sides of a cube were uniformly increased to increase the total surface area by 44%.
What was the percentage increase in the volume of the cube?
1) 33.1% 2) 57.6% 3) 66.3% 4) 72.8%
6. A spherical iron ball of radius 56 m is to be painted. However, it is realised that the require-
ment is for balls of radii 14 m. So, the bigger ball is melted and made into smaller balls of
3
radii 14 m each. The rate per sq. meter for painting the smaller balls is reduced to th of
8
the original rate. What is the impact on the original painting cost?
1) decreases by 50% 2) increases by 50%
3) decreases by 37.5% 4) doubles
7. A bowl in the shape of a hemisphere and of inner radius 3 33 inch is filled with soup of
volume 18 inch3. At the most how many Manchurian balls, of 1 inch radius, can be added
to the soup so that it does not spill over?
1) 1 2) 2 3) 3 4) 4
8. 1 m3 of metal is used to make four wires of equal length whose cross-sectional area is 250
cm2 each. Find the length of the wires made.
1) 0.05 m 2) 0.5 m 3) 0.01 m 4) 10 m
159
CATapult
GEOMETRY
9. A right circular cone, a right circular cylinder and a hemisphere, all have the same radius,
and the heights of the cone and the cylinder equal their diameters. Then their volumes are
proportional, respectively to _____.
1) 1 : 3 : 1 2) 2 : 1 : 3 3) 3 : 2 : 1 4) 1 : 2 : 3
(Past CAT question)
10. If a right circular cone of height h is cut by a plane parallel to the base and at a distance
h
from the base, then the volumes of the resulting cone and the frustum are in the ratio
3
_____.
1) 1 : 3 2) 8 : 19 3) 1 : 4 4) 1 : 7
(Past CAT question)
11. A wooden box (open at the top) of thickness 0.5 cm and length 21 cm, width 11 cm, and
height 6 cm, is painted on the inside. The expenses of painting are Rs. 70. What is the ap-
proximate rate of painting in rupees per sq cm?
1) 0.72 2) 0.51 3) 0.13 4) 0.26
(Past CAT question)
12. A cube is painted red on all sides. It is then cut into 8 identical smaller cubes. All unpaint-
ed areas are painted blue. Then each cube is further cut into 8 identical smaller cubes. All
unpainted areas are painted green now. What is the ratio of the total areas painted red, blue
and green?
1) 1 : 2 : 1 2) 1 : 2 : 2 3) 2 : 1 : 1 4) 1 : 1 : 2
13. A right angled triangle ABC of perpendicular sides AB and BC is rotated about AB as the
axis. If AB = 12 and BC = 5. Find the total surface area of solid generated.
1) 90 2) 45 3) 30 4) 85
1
14. A right circular cone is immersed in clear water to th of its height, such that its tip is in
4
water and the circular base is at the top. Find the volume of the portion of the cone above
water if the full height of the cone is 12 cm and the radius of the base of the cone is 7 cm.
4851 77 4851
1) cm3 2) cm3 3) 616 cm3 4) cm3
8 4 4
15. 2112 m3 of mud is dug out from the middle of a circular playground to build an 8 metre-deep
rectangular swimming pool. The remaining 3586 m2 area of the playground is covered in
grass. What is the radius (in metres) of the playground?
160
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
17. Two identical rectangular sheets of the form A’ABB’ are folded along C’C to form a triangular
prism whose bases are equilateral triangles. It is known that AC = AA’. If the volume of the
prism is 27 3 cubic units, find the area of the rectangle A’ABB’ (in square units).
1) 18 2) 24 3) 27 4) 36
18. A square based pyramid is cut horizontally into 2 parts as shown in the diagram. The ratio
of height of the original pyramid to that of the new pyramid is the same as the ratio of side
of square of original pyramid to that of new pyramid, and the volume of new pyramid is
1
th of the volume of original pyramid. What is the ratio of the sum of surface areas of the
8
triangular faces of part 1 to the sum of the area of the inclined faces of part 2?
161
CATapult
GEOMETRY
19. ABCDEFGH is a cuboid. String 1 is wound around four faces of the cuboid starting from
point A and ending at point D, as shown in the figure. String 2 is wound around four faces
of the cuboid starting from point E and ending at point F, as shown in the figure. What is
the ratio of the smallest possible lengths of string 1 and string 2?
20. A toy is made up of a hollow cylindrical base and a hollow hemispherical top as shown in
the figure. The toy is open only on one end and has uniform thickness “t” throughout. The
outer curved surface area of the toy is 2013 cm2 and the inner curved surface area of the
toy is 1188 cm2. The total height of the toy is 30.5 cm. Find the thickness of the toy. (Take
22
= )
7
21. Three cones of base radii 1 cm, 2 cm and 3 cm and same height 5 cm are placed next to
each other such that the base of each cone touches the bases of the other two cones. What
is the circumference of the circle that passes through the tips of all the three cones?
1) 10 2) 7.5 3) 5 4) 3
162
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
PRACTICE EXERCISE-2
DIRECTIONS for question 1: Solve as directed.
1. If the surface area of a blue-coloured sphere is 800% more than that of a red-coloured
sphere, by what percent is the volume of the blue-coloured sphere more than that of the
red-coloured sphere?
2. A slab of ice 8 inches in length, 11 inches in breadth, and 2 inches thick was melted and
re-solidified in the form of a rod of 8 inches diameter. The length of such a rod, in inches
is nearest to:
1) 3 2) 3.5 3) 4 4) 4.5
(Past CAT question)
3. The diameter of a hollow cone is equal to the diameter of a spherical ball. If the ball is
placed at the base of the cone, what portion of the ball will be outside the cone?
1) 50% 2) Less than 50%
3) More than 50% 4) Cannot be determined
(Past CAT question)
4. A solid square pyramid having base area of 49 cm2 is cut by a plane parallel to the base.
The upper part of the pyramid is melted to form a sphere. If the diameter of the sphere is
equal to the side of base of melted part of the pyramid then, what was the height of the
solid square pyramid?
1) 7 cm 2) 22 cm 3) 11 cm 4) 15 cm
7. A regular tetrahedron of length 12 cm is accommodated in a sphere such that all its vertices
touch the sphere. Find the radius of the sphere.
1) 7.2 cm 2) 7 cm 3) 7.5 cm 4) 6.5 cm
8. An ice-cream, in the shape of right circular cone is cut (parallel to its base) into 5 slices,
all of equal heights. What is the ratio of the volume of middle slice to that of the volume of
the biggest slice?
1) 4 : 25 2) 41 : 93 3) 19 : 61 4) 27 : 125
163
CATapult
GEOMETRY
9. A hollow cone with base radius 9 cm and height 12 cm is filled with water up to a level of
8 cm height when kept on closed circular base. What height does the water come upto, if
this cone is kept in an inverted position such that the apex of the cone will be facing down?
1) 3 3 26 cm 2) 8 cm 3) 7 3 13 cm 4) 4 3 26 cm
10. An iron pillar has some part in the form of a right circular cylinder and the remaining part in
the form of a right circular cone. The radius of the base of the cone as well as the cylinder
is 8 cm. The cylindrical part is 240 cm high and the conical part is 36 cm high. Find the
weight of the pillar, if 1 cm3 of iron weighs 7.8 gm.
1) 3.6 kg 2) 163.7 kg 3) 253 kg 4) 395 kg 5) 300 kg
11. A glass showpiece in the shape of a sphere of radius 5 cm is packed into a cardboard cubic
box whose sides are of length are 12 cm. To prevent the showpiece from rolling around,
8 identical rubber spheres are placed in the corners of the box. What is the radius of the
rubber spheres?
6 3 –5 12 3 – 10 6 3 –5 12 3 – 10
1) cm 2) cm3) cm 4) cm
1+ 3 2+ 3 1+ 2 2+ 2
12. The ratio of the volume of a hexagonal pyramid, P, to that of a hexagonal prism, Q, is 4 :
25. If the heights of P and Q are interchanged, then the ratio of their respective volumes
becomes 9 : 100. What is the ratio of their respective volumes, if the sides of P and Q are
interchanged?
1) 100 : 9 2) 100 : 81 3) 100 : 27 4) 23 : 36
13. What is the length of side of a cube, if the area of the largest equilateral triangle that can
perfectly fit inside the cube is 50 3 cm2?
1) 5 cm 2) 5 3 cm 3) 10 3 cm 4) 10 cm
14. One of the base edges of a metallic plate, which is in the form of a right triangle is soldered
to a wire. The wire is rotated around its own axis. What is the maximum volume that can
be generated by the metallic plate given that the smallest side of the triangular plate is 8
cm and the largest side is 2 cm greater than the second largest side?
1) 600 sq.cm 2) 320 sq.cm 3) 60 sq.cm 4) Data insufficient
164
Chapter QA
3-DIMENSIONAL FIGURES AND MENSURATION 3.6
15. The given three-dimensional figure has bases which are regular hexagons. One of the bases is
16. A fish tank in the shape of a cuboid has length, breadth and height of 60 cm, 40 cm and
80 cm respectively and it is filled with water. The base of the tank is tilted by 45° along the
breadth and water coming out from the tank is collected in an empty vessel. The volume
of water collected in the empty vessel is 32 litres. What was the height of water that was
initially there in the cuboid tank? [Assume thickness of the water tank to be negligible].
1) 80 cm 2) 60 cm 3) 63.33 cm 4) 76.66 cm
17. A solid sphere is cut along three planes perpendicular to each other to form 8 identical parts.
The curved surface of each part is painted red and the flat surfaces are painted blue. Find
the ratio of the area of the red surface to the area of the blue surface in each part.
1) 2 : 3 2) 3 : 8 3) 1 : 2 4) 1 : 3
18. A right circular cylinder of radius 10 cm and height 40 cm is placed on the ground. A sphere
of largest possible size is enclosed in the cylinder and is on the base of the cylinder. A sec-
ond sphere having half the radius of the first sphere is stuck to the first sphere. Continuing
this, a number of spheres are stuck to one another such that each sphere touches the two
adjoining spheres and each sphere has radius equal to half the radius of the earlier sphere.
If the line joining the centres of all the spheres is parallel to the axis of the cylinder and
the total height of the “tower of spheres” is equal to the height of the cylinder, what is the
sum of the surface areas of all the spheres?
1600
1)
3 r
800
2)
3 r
3200
3)
3 r
4) More information is needed to answer the question
165
CATapult
GEOMETRY
19. A cube is cut into three parts as shown below, such that the ratio of the total surface areas
of the resulting cuboids is 13 : 17 : 15 (a, b and c are integers). Which of the following
can be the volume of the original cube, given that the length of the side of the cube is an
integer value?
1) 343 cu. units 2) 1000cu. units 3) 512 cu. units 4) 729 cu. units
20. Seven identical solid spheres are fit inside a larger hollow sphere such that they touch each
other and the outermost spheres touch the larger sphere. The centres of all the spheres lie
on the same plane. Find the ratio of the volume inside the larger sphere that is occupied by
the smaller spheres to the volume of air inside the larger sphere.
1) 7 : 27 2) 1 : 3 3) 7 : 20 4) 7 : 10
21. A cone of radius 21 cm is inserted inside a larger cone (as shown in the figure) such that
when it can’t go further in, the vertex of the smaller cone is on the same plane as the base
of the larger cone. If the radius and height of the larger cone are 35 cm and 45 cm respec-
tively, find the volume of the larger cone (in cm3) that is not occupied by the smaller cone.
166
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Units of measurement
• Time is measured in seconds (s), minutes (min) or hours (hr).
• Distance is usually measured in metres (m), kilometres (km), miles, yards or feet.
• Speed is usually measured in metres/sec. (m/s), kilometres/hour (km/hr) or miles/hr.
Conversion of units
1. 1 hour = 60 minutes = 60 × 60 seconds.
2. 1 kilometer = 1000 metres
3. 1 kilometre = 0.6214 mile
1 mile = 1.609 kilometre
i.e., 8 kilometres 5 miles
4. 1 yard = 3 feet
km = 5m
5. 18s
hr
m = 18km
6. s =
5hr
km 5 miles
7. .
hr 8hr
miles = 22 = ft
8. 15 sec
hr
1
1. If distance is constant, Speed
Time
167
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Example
3
Walking at 4 th of his usual speed, a man is 1 1 hrs late. Find his usual travel time.
2
If the usual time is t hrs, and usual speed is x kmph, then,
9
4t = 3t + 2 t = 4 1 hrs
2
Original time taken for journey = 4 1 hrs and new time taken for journey = 6 hrs
2
With distance being the same, decrease in speed leads to increase in time i.e., with distance being
constant, speed is inversely proportional to time.
i.e., we can say that ratio of the distance travelled is equal to the ratio of the speed of the vehicle
in two equal time intervals or that distance is directly proportional to speed if time is constant.
168
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
Average speed
THEORY
If a body travels d1, d2, d3... dn distances, with speeds s1, s2, s3... sn in time t1, t2, t3 ... tn
respectively then the average speed of the body through the total distance is given by:
Cases of an object travelling with different speeds during different time intervals
1. If a body covers the distance d1 and d2 at a speed of s1 and s2 km/hr, respectively, in time
t1 and t2 then the total time taken T is given by:
d d
T = t1 + t2 = s11 + s22 .
The total distance covered is given by: D = d1 + d2 = s1t1 + s2t2.
2. While travelling a certain distance d, if a man changes his speed in the ratio m : n, then the
ratio of time taken becomes n : m.
3. If a certain distance (d), say from A to B, is covered at ‘a’ km/hr and the same distance is
covered again say from B to A in ‘b’ km/hr, then the average speed during the whole journey
is given by:
Average speed = b a + b l
2ab km
... (which is the harmonic mean of a and b)
hr
Also, if t1 and t2 is time taken to travel from A to B and B to A, respectively, the distance
‘d’ from A to B is given by:
d = (t1 + t2) b a + b l
ab
d = (t1 – t2) b a - b l
ab
d = (a – b) b t 1- t2 l
t t
1 2
4. If a body travels a distance ‘d’ from A to B with speed ‘a’ in time t1 and travels back from
m
B to A i.e., the same distance with n of the usual speed ‘a’, then the change in time taken
to cover the same distance is given by:
169
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : If a boy goes to school at 6 km/hr and returns home at 4 km/hr, find his average speed.
2 × 6 × 4 = 48
A : Average speed = 6+4 10 = 4.8 km/hr
Q : A man starts from B to K, another from K to B at the same time. After passing each other
1 4
they complete their journeys in 3 3 and 4 5 hours, respectively. Find the speed of the
second man if the speed of the first is 12 km/hr.
4
1 st man's speed b b = 45 24 3 = 36 = 6
A : = = a 1
=
5 × 10 25 5
2nd man's speed a 33
12 =6 60
2nd man’s speed = 6 = 10 km/hr.
2nd man's speed 5
Q : I shall be 40 min late to reach my office if I walk from my house at 3 km/hr. I shall be 30
min early if I walk at 4 km/hr. Find the distance between my house and the office.
A : Let the usual time taken be ‘t’ hours and speed be x km/hr.
Distance = xt = 3 b t + 60 l = 4 b t - 60 l
40 30
3t + 2 = 4t – 2
4 = t
Distance = 3 b4 + 3 l = 14 km.
2
Q : A man travels 120 km by ship, 450 km by rail and 60 km by horse taking altogether 13
hrs 30 min. The speed of the train is 3 times that of the horse and 1½ times that of the
ship. Find the speed of the train.
A : If the speed of the horse is x km/hr; that of the train is 3x and that of the ship is
3x
1 = 2x km/hr
12
120 + 450 + 60 = 27 60 + 150 + 60 = 27
2x 3x x 2 x x x 2
270 = 27
x 2 x = 20 Speed of the train = 60 km/hr
A : When they meet, both together have walked 2 × 21 = 42 km Since their speeds are as 3
: 4, distances travelled are also as 3 : 4
3
Distance travelled by A = PR = 7 × 42 = 18 km.
170
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
4
Q : A train after travelling 50 km from A meets with an accident and proceeds at 5 th of the
THEORY
former speed and reaches B, 45 min late. Had the accident happened 20 km further on,
it would have arrived 12 min sooner(than if the accident occured at C). Find the original
20
A C D B
4 5
When the speed becomes 5 th of the usual, time taken would become 4 th the usual, i.e.,
1
4 th more of the usual time.
1
So, 4 th of the usual time taken to travel CB = 45 min.
1
4 th of usual time taken to travel CD (i.e. 20 km) = 12 min
60
Usual speed = 20 × 48 = 25 km/hr.
Distance CB = 25 × 3 = 75 km.
Q : A man travelling from A to B at 3 mph, takes half an hour rest at B, and returns to A at 5
mph. Total time taken is 3 hrs 26 min. Find the distance from A to B. (m miles)
A : Total time taken for travelling = 3 hrs 26 min. – 30 min. = 2 hrs. 56 min.
56 176
= 2 60 = 60 hrs.
Distance from A to B
176 b 3× 5 l = 176 15
= 60 3 + 5 60 × 8 = 5.5 miles
171
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
8
Q : Walking 7 th of his original rate, a man reaches his office 3 minutes early. Find the usual
time he takes to reach office.
Q : The ratio between the speed of Meena and Teena is 2 : 3. Meena takes 20 minutes more
than Teena to walk from A to B. If Meena had walked at double her speed, find the time
she would take to walk from A to B.
172
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
Concept Builder 1
THEORY
1. A distance is covered by man in 2 hrs and 45 minutes at 4 kmph. How much time will be
Answer key
15 km. 7.
7 km/hr. 6.
125km/hr. 5.
24 kmph. 4.
42 km. 3.
50 minutes. 2.
40 mins. 1.
173
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Relative speed
The word ‘relative’ means one with respect to another. Relative Speed means the speed of an
object A with respect to another object B, which may be stationary, moving in the same direction
as A or in the opposite direction as A.
Cases related to Relative Speed
Case 1
When one object is stationary and the other is moving.
Consider a boy standing on a platform and a train passing by. Here, the boy is stationary, while
the train is moving. The relative speed of the train and the boy will be the speed of the train.
Relative speed of a stationary object and a moving object = Speed of the moving object.
Case 2
When the two objects are moving in the opposite direction.
Consider two boys, A and B, standing at two opposite ends of a ground. Now, if they start walking
towards each other in a straight line, they would meet sooner than had one of them been stationary
and their relative speed will be the sum of their speeds.
Relative speed of two objects moving in opposite direction = Sum of their speeds.
Case 3
When the two objects are moving in the same direction.
Consider a boy ‘A’ walking from x to y. Now, if another boy ‘B’ walks from a point z which is
behind x, in the same direction as A at a speed greater than A’s, they would meet later than had
A been stationary at x. Their relative speed is the difference of their speeds.
A
z x y
B
Relative speed of two objects moving in the same direction = Difference of their speeds.
Rules and Formulae for Relative Speed
1. Time taken by a moving object ‘x’ metres long in passing a stationary object of negligible
length from the time they meet is same as the time taken by the moving object to cover ‘x’
meters with its own speed.
2. Time taken by a moving object ‘x’ metres long in passing a stationary object ‘y’ metres long
from the time they meet, is same as the time taken by the moving object to cover ‘x + y’
metres with its own speed.
3. If two objects of length ‘x’ and ‘y’ metres move in the same direction at ‘a’ and ‘b’ m/s,
then the time taken to cross each other from the time they meet
Sum of their length x+y x+y
= i.e., if a > b or else, .
Relative speed a -b b-a
4. If two objects of length ‘x’ and ‘y meters, move in the opposite direction at ‘a’ and ‘b’ m/s,
then the time taken to cross each other from the time they meet
Sum of their length x + y
= =
Relative speed a+b
174
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
5. If the speed of a boat in still water is x km/hr. and the speed of the stream is y km/hr Speed
THEORY
while travelling with the stream i.e., speed downstream = (x + y) km/hr.
Speed while travelling against the stream i.e., speed upstream = (x – y) km/hr.
1
6. Also, speed of the boat in still water = 2 (Speed with stream + Speed against stream)
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : I row from A to B against the current in 8 hrs. and from B to A in 2 hrs. If the speed of
the river is 9 m/sec., what is the speed of the boat in still water?
A : Let the speed of the boat in still water be x
Time taken for up - journey
=8=4
Time taken for down - journey 2 1
Speed for up - journey
= 1 (inverse)
Speed for down - journey 4
x-9 1
x + 9 = 4 (x is the speed of the boat)
3x = 45 x = 15 m/sec.
Q : A train travelling at 25 km/hr, leaves Delhi at 9 a.m. and another leaves Delhi at 35 km/hr.
at 2 p.m. in the same direction. How many kms from Delhi do they meet?
A : The first train has a start of 5 × 25 = 125 km. Relative speed = 35 – 25 = 10 km/hr.
Q : A man rows 27 km. with the stream and 15 km. against the stream taking 4 hrs each time.
Find his speed in km/hr in still water and the speed in km/hr at which the stream flows.
27 = 3
A : Speed with the stream = 4 6 4 km/hr.
15 = 3
Speed against the stream = 4 3 4 km/hr.
175
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Q : Two trains 121 metres long and 99 metres long are running in opposite directions, the first
at 40 km/hr. and the second at 32 km/hr. In what time will they completely clear each
other from the moment they meet?
A : Total distance to be travelled = 121 + 99 = 220 metres.
5
Relative speed = Sum of speeds = 72 km/hr. = 72 × 18 = 20 m/s.
220
Time required = 20 = 11 seconds.
Q : How long does a train 110 metres long running at 36 km/hr. take to cross a bridge 132
metres in length?
A : Distance to be covered = 110 + 132 = 242 metres
5 242
Speed = 36 × 18 = 10 m/sec. Time taken = 10 = 24.2 seconds.
Q : A car which was driven in fog passed a man walking at 3 km/hr. in the same direction. He
could see the car for 4 minutes and upto a distance of 100 m. What was the speed of the
car?
4 12000
A : Distance travelled by the man in 4 mins. = 60 × 3000 = 60 = 200 m.
Distance travelled by the car in 4 mins. = 200 + 100 = 300 m.
300 300 1
Speed of the car = 4 m/minute = 4 × 1000 × 60 = 4 2 km/hr.
1
Q : A person can row 7 2 km/hr. in still water. It takes him twice as long to row up a distance
as to row down the same distance. Find the speed of the stream.
1
A : Speed up-stream + Speed down-stream = 2 × 7 2 = 15 km/hr.
Since the times taken are in the ratio 2 : 1, the speeds will be in the ratio 1 : 2.
1
Speed up-stream = 3 × 15 = 5 km/hr.
2
Speed down-stream = 3 × 15 = 10 km/hr.
1
Speed of stream = 2 (10 – 5) = 2.5 km/hr.
Alternatively,
1 1
72 +x 72 -x
If the speed of the stream is x km/hr., = 2
=
1
x = 2.5 km/hr.
176
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
Q : A hare sees a dog 100 metres away from her, and scuds off in the opposite direction at a
THEORY
speed of 12 km/hr. A minute later, the dog sees the hare and chases the hare at a speed
of 16 km/ hr. After how much time does the dog catch up with the hare?
1000
A : 12 km/hr. = 12 × 60 = 200 metres/min.
Q : A train leaving L at 3:10 p.m. reaches W at 5:00 p.m. One leaving W at 3:30 p.m. arrives in
L at 5:50 p.m. At what time do they pass each other?
A : Let the distance be d and let them meet t mins after 3:10 p.m. or (t – 20) mins. after 3:30p.m.
3:10 p.m. d km. 5:00 p.m.
L t W
5:50 p.m. 3:30 p.m.
d d
Their speeds are 110 km/mins. and 140 km/mins.
d d t t - 20
Distance = 110 × t + 140 (t – 20) = d 110 + 140 = 1
Solving t = 70.4 mins.
They meet at 3:10 + 70.4 mins. = 4 hrs 20.4 mins.
Q : A train moving at uniform speed takes 20 secs. to pass a cyclist riding in the same
direction at 11 km/hr but only 9 secs. to pass a post. Find the length of the train.
A : If the length of the train is , km. and its speed x km/hr., then,
, = 20
x - 11 3600 ... (i)
and
, 9
x = 3600 ... (ii)
, x = 20 x 20
Dividing (i) by (ii), x - 11 × , 9 x - 11 = 9
x = 20 km/hr.
Length = 0.05 km = 50 metres.
177
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Concept Builder 2
1. Two trains which are running in oppositite direction meet each other after 2 mins, total dis-
tance travel by both trains is 1.8 km. Find average of speed of both trains (in m/s).
2. A goods train runs at the speed of 54 km/hr and crosses a 110 metres long platform in 20
seconds. What is the length of the goods train?
3. Two trains running at the rate of 30 kmph and 36 kmph respectively in the same direction.
The length of second train is 130 metres and the time taken by them to cross each other
is 150 seconds (from the time they meet). Then the length of first train is:
4. Two trains of 400 m and 475 m in length runs at the speed of 45 km/hr and ‘X’ km/hr
respectively in opposite directions on parallel tracks. The time taken by them to cross each
other (from the time they meet) is 42 seconds, then find ‘X’.
5. A man can row at a speed of 8 km/hr in still water to a certain upstream point and back
to the starting point in a river which flows at 4 km/hr. Find his average speed for the total
journey.
6. A man can row upstream at 7 km/hr and downstream at 15 km/hr. Then the speed of the
stream is:
7. A boat takes 7 hours for travelling downstream from point ‘A’ to point ‘B’ and coming back
to point ‘A’ travelling upstream. If the speed of the stream is 3 kmph and the speed of the
boat in still water is 7 kmph, what is the distance between A and B?
8. The speed of a river is 3 kmph. If a man takes twice as long to row up as to row down the
river, the rate of man in still water is:
Answer Key
9 kmph 8.
20 km 7.
4 kmph 6.
6 km/hr. 5.
30 m/s. 4.
120 meters. 3.
190 metres. 2.
7.5 m/s. 1.
178
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
CLASS EXERCISE
Teaser
Is Pete correct?
179
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Distance
Time, Speed and Distance are related by the formula Speed =
Time
Total Distance
Average speed can be found, in general, by the formula Average Speed =
Total Time
Specifically, if the time is the same in two legs of a journey, the average speed is the Arithmetic
Mean while if the distance is the same in two legs of a journey, the average speed is the
Harmonic Mean
5 18
Some useful conversions: 1 kmph = 18 m/s, 1 m/s = 5 kmph, 1 mile = 1.6 km, 1 km =
1000 m
9. * A boy reaches his school, 1.4 km away, in 1hr 40 min. At what speed does he travel?
10. * A boy leaves for school at 10:40 a.m. He spends 5 hrs in school and comes back at 5:20
pm on the same day. He travels at a constant speed of 1.4 km/hr. How far away is his
school?
11. * A boy travels at 4 kmph to reach school. How many metres does he travel per second?
12. * A boy travels to school at 4 kmph and returns back at the speed of 6 kmph. What is his
average speed?
13. Ravi usually takes 1.4 hrs to reach school. If he walks at 75% of his usual speed, how much
time will he take?
14. If Raj walks at 5/4th of his usual speed, he reaches 10 min early. How long does he usually
take?
180
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
15. Akbar and Birbal start towards each other from their homes, 15 km apart, at 10 a.m. Akbar
THEORY
walks at a constant speed of 4 kmph, while Birbal walks at a constant speed of 6 kmph.
When will they meet?
16. In the previous question, after Akbar and Birbal meet, they chat for half an hour and then
Relative Speed:
The relative speed of two objects is the speed with which one object moves with respect to
the other.
When two objects are moving in opposite directions, their relative speed is the sum of their
speeds
When two objects are moving in the same direction, their relative speed is the difference of
their speeds
However, the lengths of the objects involved always add!
20. * One fine day Anil started late by half an hour for work. By what % should he increase his
speed to reach office in time if he usually takes 2 hrs to reach office?
21. * The ratio of time taken by P and Q is 7: 9 to cover the same distance. What is the ratio
of their speeds?
22. * A bus 6 m in length takes two seconds to pass a truck, 8 m long, going in the opposite
direction. If the bus driver is driving at 4m/s, at what speed is the truck moving?
23. * A deer sees a tiger 100m away and starts running away from it at the speed of 15 mps.
The tiger sees the deer 5 seconds later and pursues it at the speed of 40 mps. How much
later will the tiger catch the deer?
Directions for questions 24 – 26: Each of the following sets of questions is based on an independent
scenario. Information given in a question is valid for all later questions in the set.
181
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
25. The Howrah Mail is a 180 m long train that travels at 54 kmph and the Coromandel Express
is a 200 m long train that travels at 72 kmph. These trains run on parallel tracks.
a) How long will the Howrah Mail take to cross the Coromandel Express if they are running
towards each other?
b) How long will the Howrah Mail take to cross the Coromandel Express if they are running
in the same direction?
c) How long will the Coromandel Express take to cross the Howrah Mail if they are running
in the same direction?
d) At 10 a.m., the Coromandel Express is 100 m behind the Howrah Mail and running in the
same direction. At what time will it have completely crossed the latter?
26. A boat travels at the speed of 18 kmph in still water. It travels between points A and B, 80
km apart.
a) If the boat goes from A to B, downstream in 4 hours, how long will it take to return?
b) What is the normal speed of the current in the river?
c) If the speed of the river triples one day due to a rainstorm, how long will the round trip
from A to B and back take on that day?
d) If the boat develops engine trouble and can consequently go at only one-third of its normal
rate in still water, how long will the round trip take on a normal day?
e) At what speed must the current flow so that the round trip would take 22.5 hours with
the boat in normal condition?
27) * If a train 200 m long crosses a bridge 350 m long in 11 seconds, what is the speed of
the train?
28) * Find the time taken by a 240-foot roller-coaster moving at 56 ft/sec to pass through a
40-foot tunnel.
182
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
Challengers
THEORY
1. Wilson starts for office at the same time every day. If he walks at 5 kmph he is 2 min late.
If he walks at 10 kmph he is 4 min early. Find his correct speed to reach on time, and the
2. Prashant can row 7 1 kmph in still water. It takes him twice as long to row upstream as to
2
row downstream. Find the speed of the stream.
1) 2.5 kmph 2) 5 kmph 3) 3 kmph 4) 1.5 kmph
3. A train had engine trouble and hence its speed got reduced to 2/3rd of normal. It reached
the destination at 3:12 p.m. Had the engine trouble occurred 48 km further on, the train
would have reached at exactly 3 p.m. What is the normal speed of the train?
1) 60 kmph 2) 80 kmph 3) 100 kmph 4) 120 kmph
4. Two trains A and B, whose speeds are in the ratio 4 : 3, cross each other in 18 seconds
when they travel in opposite directions. Train A crosses a pole in 24 seconds. What is the
time taken (in seconds) by train B to cross a pole?
183
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
PRACTICE EXERCISE-1
1. Rohan travels at 40 kmph for 2 hrs, 60 kmph for the next 2 hrs and 80 kmph for the last
2 hrs. Find the average speed for the entire trip?
2. P covers a certain distance in 4.8 hrs. Q covers twice the distance in 8 hours. How much
time will P take to cover the distance that Q covers in 4.5 hours?
3. Raman covers 3/7th of the distance by train, 5/14th of the distance by car and the remaining
9 km on foot. What is the total distance that he covered?
4. A train travelling at 42 km/hr. passes a cyclist going in the same direction in 9 secs.; if the
cyclist had been going in the opposite direction, the train would have passed him in 5 secs.
Find the length of the train.
1) 75 metres 2) 60 metres 3) 90 metres 4) 80 metres
5. A train overtakes 2 persons walking at 2 km/hr and 4 km/hr respectively in the same direc-
tion and completely passes them in 9 seconds and 10 seconds. Find the length of the train
and its speed in km/hr.
1) 75 m, 18 km/hr 2) 80 m, 21 km/hr
3) 60 m, 20 km/hr 4) 50 m, 22 km/hr
6. A policeman sees a thief 300m away and starts chasing him at a speed of 16 kmph. The
thief is running at a speed of 12 kmph but after 4 minutes, the thief gets exhausted and
falls down. What is the distance between the two now?
1) 10 m 2) 25 m 3) 33.33 m 4) 66.67 m
7. A man rows upstream 13 km. and downstream 28 km. taking 5 hrs. each time. Find the
speed of the current.
1) 2 km/hr. 2) 1.5 km/hr. 3) 3 km/hr. 4) 3.5 km/hr.
8. A place B lies exactly midway on the path from A to C such that all the places are connected
by roadway, waterway and railway. The average speeds by road, water and rail are 10 kmph,
5 kmph and 15 kmph respectively. Which of the following routes will take the maximum time
to reach C from A?
1) A to B by road and B to C by road
2) A to B by water and B to C by rail
3) A to B by rail and B to C by road
4) A to B by road and B to C by water
184
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
9. Two trains, both 120 metres in length, move in the same direction. The faster train completely
THEORY
overtakes the slower one in 15 seconds. If the slower train were to move at half its speed,
the overtaking would take 10 seconds. At what speeds are the two trains moving (in mps)?
1) 48 and 16 2) 32 and 16 3) 48 and 32
4) 64 and 48 5] 64 and 32
CLASS EXERCISE
10. Two trains A and B start from two points P1 and P2 respectively at the same time and travel
towards one another. The difference between their speeds is 10 kmph and train A takes one
hour more to cover the distance between P1 and P2 as compared to train B. Also by the time
200
PRACTICE EXERCISE
they meet, train B has covered 9 km more as compared to train A. What is the distance
between P1 and P2?
1) 150 km 2) 200 km 3) 250 km 4) Data insufficient
11. A train travelling at 10 m/sec from A to B at 7 a.m. meets a train leaving B at 7:20 a.m.
1
and coming to A at a speed 3 times faster than the first train. If the distance from A to B
is 68 km. then, at what distance from A will the two trains meet?
1) 72 km 2) 36 km 3) 60 km 4) 50 km
12. A car after travelling 18 km from a point A developed some problem in the engine and its
speed became 4/5 of its original speed. As a result, the car reached point B 45 minutes
late. If the engine had developed the same problem after travelling 30 km from A, then it
would have reached B only 36 minutes late. The original speed of the car (in km per hour)
and the distance between the points A and B (in km) is _____.
1) 25, 130 2) 30, 150 3) 20, 90 4) None of these
(Past CAT question)
13. Two trains are travelling in opposite direction at uniform speed 60 and 50 km/hr respec-
tively. They take 5 seconds to cross each other. If the two trains had travelled in the same
direction, then a passenger sitting in the faster moving train would have overtaken the other
train in 18 seconds. What are the lengths of trains (in metres)?
1) 112.78, 45 2) 97.78, 55 3) 102.78, 50 4) 102.78, 55
(Past CAT question)
14. A man travels from A to B at a speed of x km/hr. He then rests at B for x hours. He then
travels from B to C at a speed of 2x km/hr and rests for 2x hours. He moves further to D
at a speed equal to twice of that taken to travel between B and C. He thus reaches D in 16
hours. If the distances A-B, B-C, C-D are all equal to 12 km, the time for which he rested
at B could be _____.
1) 3 hours 2) 6 hours 3) 2 hours 4) 4 hours
(Past CAT question)
185
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
15. The distance between A and B is 72 km. Two men started walking from A and B at the same
time towards each other. The person who started from A travelled uniformly with an average
speed of 4 km/hr. The other man travelled with varying speeds as follows: In the first hour
his speed was 2 km/hr, in the second hour it was 2.5 km/hr, in the third hour it was 3 km/
hr, and so on. When will they meet each other?
1) 7 hours 2) 10 hours
3) 35 km from A 4) Midway between A and B
(Past CAT question)
16. A train travelled a certain distance at a uniform speed. Had the speed been 8 kmph more, the
journey would have taken 3 hours less and had the speed been 10 kmph less, the journey
would have taken 6 hours more. Find the distance travelled by the train.
1) 480 km 2) 720 km 3) 800 km 4) 640 km
17. A boat sails 24 km downstream of a river stretch in 3 hours. How long will it take to cover
the same distance upstream, if the speed of the current is one-third the speed of the boat
in still water?
1) 4 hours 2) 6 hours 3) 8 hours 4) 12 hours
18. A motorboat travels 23 kmph in still waters. If it goes downstream from X to Y, a distance
of 120 km, in four hours, how long will it take to return?
19. The life guards at Aksa beach spotted an unconscious man flowing downstream along the
water towards the beach at 1m/s. They immediately set sail on their power boat upstream at
a speed of 25m/s. As soon as they reached the man, they stopped the boat. It took them 14
seconds to bring him to consciousness inside their boat while the engine of the boat stopped
and the boat itself was flowing downstream towards the shore at the speed of the water
current. Immediately after the man regained his conciousness, they sailed at their original
speed downstream and were able to return to the shore in 41 seconds. At what distance
had the lifeguards initially spotted the man?
20. At 7:00 AM, two brothers Ajay and Vijay started from their home to their school to appear
for an examination. Ajay walked at the speed of 6 km/hr while Vijay rode a bicycle at the
speed of 18 km/hr. On reaching school, Vijay realized that he forgot his hall-ticket. So he
immediately headed back home riding at the same speed. On his way back, at 7:15 AM, he
met Ajay, who was on his way to school. What is the distance between the home and the
school (in metres)?
186
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
PRACTICE EXERCISE-2
1. A boy travels for 40 minutes at the speed of 4 km per hour and the next 40 minutes at the
speed of 6 kmph. What is his average speed?
2. The ratio of speeds of two brothers Jenish and Jinesh is 3: 2. Jinesh takes 20 min more
than Jenish to walk from home to school. If Jinesh walks at twice his usual speed, find the
time he will take to walk from home to school.
Directions for questions 3 and 4: Refer to the data below and answer the questions that follow.
It takes Kim 4 hours to drive from her house to her office at her normal speed. If she reduces
her speed by 3kmph, she takes 40 minutes extra.
4. If Kim’s car breaks down after 3 hours, while driving at her normal speed, and then she
decides to walk to the office, what should be her walking speed so that she is just 2 hours
late to the office than the anticipated time?
1) 3.5 kmph 2) 5 kmph 3) 3 kmph 4) 7 kmph
5. The speeds, of a sports car in four different practice runs on the same track, are 100, 120,
80 and 120 miles/hour. Find its average speed (approximately) in miles/hour.
1) 100 2) 102 3) 96 4) 110
6. Two trains A and B of length 88 yds. and 132 yds. respectively, are approaching each other
from opposite directions at 60 and 45 mph, respectively. How long do they take to pass each
other?
1 2 3
1) 5 secs. 2) 3 4 sec. 3) 4 7 secs. 4) 6 8 secs.
187
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
7. A train 150m long travels at a speed of 100 kmph. A man standing on top of the train runs
from one end of the train to the other at a speed of 20 kmph in the same direction as the
train. How many seconds will he take to reach the other end?
1) 27 2) 22.5 3) 2.25 4) None of these
8. A policeman, who is 80m away from a thief, starts chasing him. The thief is running at a
speed of 10m/s. After exactly 8 second, the distance between them is 40m. Find the po-
liceman’s speed.
1) 10.5 m/s. 2) 16.67 m/s. 3) 15 m/s. 4) None of these
9. If the current flows at 2 mph and it takes me 3 hrs. to row 9 miles upstream, how long will
it take to return?
2 5 2 5
1) 1 7 hrs. 2) 2 7 hrs. 3) 2 3 hrs. 4) 1 7 hrs.
10. Train A started from Mumbai to Calcutta. At the same time, train B started from Calcutta
to Mumbai. The two trains are sent for a testing wherein they travelled at constant speed,
reached the destination and returned to the source without halting. The trains meet each
other for the first time in 18 hours after starting. The two trains reached their respective
sources i.e., A to Mumbai and B to Calcutta in 17 hours 4 minutes and 19 hours 16 minutes
respectively after they cross each other for the second time. After how many hours from the
starting point, did they cross each other second time?
1) 36 hours 2) 45 hours 3) 54 hours 4) 72 hours
11. A hunter sees a deer 200m away and immediately shoots an arrow which can travel at a
speed of 30 m/sec for 300 metres after which it drops down (immediately). At what speed
should the deer run so as to miss the arrow?
1) more than 10 m/sec 2) more than 30 m/sec
3) more than 5 m/sec 4) None of these
12. I take 4 hours less to row down a 12 mile stream than I take to row upstream. For this 24
mile roundtrip, if I double my rowing speed, I would take half an hour less to row down-
stream than to row upstream. Find the speed of the stream in miles/hr.
1) 6 2) 8 3) 0 4) 10 5) None of these
13. Two trains A and B start from stations X and Y towards each other. B leaves station Y half an
hour after train A leaves station X. Two hours after train A has started, the distance between
19
trains A and B is 30 th of the distance between stations X and Y. How much time would it
take each train (A and B) to cover the distance X to Y, if train A reaches half an hour later
to its destination as compared to B?
1) 8 hrs, 7 hrs 2) 5 hrs, 4 hrs 3) 10 hrs, 9 hrs 4) 9 hrs, 8 hrs
14. A man starts cycling at 12.00 a.m. at a speed of 5 kmph. A train, A, starts running on a
track with a speed of 100 kmph at 5.00 a.m. Another train, B, starts running on the adjacent
parallel track with a speed of 120 kmph at 7.00 am from the same station and in the same
direction. Find the distance travelled by the man when the two trains meet.
1) 68 km 2) 85 km 3) 90 km 4) 92 km
188
Chapter QA
TIME, SPEED AND DISTANCE 3.7
15. Every day Neera’s husband meets her at the city railway station at 6.00 p.m. and drives her
THEORY
to their residence. One day she left early from the office and reached the railway station at
5.00 p.m. She started walking towards her home, met her husband coming from their resi-
dence on the way and they reached home 10 minutes earlier than the usual time. For how
long did she walk?
CLASS EXERCISE
1
1) 1 hour 2) 50 minutes 3) 2 an hour 4) 55 minutes
(Past CAT question)
16. I started climbing up the hill at 6 a.m. and reached the temple at the top at 6 p.m. The
PRACTICE EXERCISE
next day I started coming down at 6 a.m. and reached the foothill at 6 p.m. I walked on the
same road. The road is so short that only one person can walk on it. Although I varied my
pace along the way, I never stopped on my way. On the basis of this, which of the following
must be true?
1) My average speed downhill was greater than that uphill.
2) At noon, I was at the same spot on both the days.
3) There must be a point which I reached at the same time on both the days.
4) There cannot be a spot which I reached at the same time on both the days.
(Past CAT question)
17. A bus started from the bus stand at 8.00 a.m. After staying for 30 minutes at its destination,
it returned back to the bus stand. The destination is 27 miles from the bus stand while the
speed of the bus was 18 mph. During the return journey, the bus traveled 50% faster than
the original journey. At what time did it return to the bus stand?
1) 11:30 a.m. 2) 11:00 a.m. 3) 12:30 p.m. 4) 12:00 noon
18. If the speed of a car is increased by 20 km/h, it reaches its destination 2 hours earlier. If
the speed is further increased by 20 km/h, the car reaches 3 hours earlier than its usual
time. What will be the speed (in km/h) of the car if it reaches 2 hours late?
19. A hare and a tortoise decided to race each other. They began running at the same time.
After the hare gained a lead of 35 m, he stopped to rest while waiting for the tortoise to at
least reach the point where he had reached. But he lost track of time and when he woke up
2
after 4 3 minutes, he saw that the tortoise had gained a lead of 35 m. So he immediately
started running and lost the race by 7 m. What is the ratio of the time that the hare ran
before going to sleep and the time he ran after waking from sleep?
1) 4 : 5 2) 5 : 4 3) 1 : 1 4) Data insufficient
189
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
20. A cruise carries passengers from the port to a certain point upstream and brings them back
to the port. It travels upstream for 1.5 hours and downstream for half an hour. However,
on one occasion, after travelling 1.5 hours upstream, the ship developed a technical error,
because of which its speed reduced. At the same time, the speed of the stream suddenly
increased due to a thunderstorm. The ship managed to return to the port in time. What was
the ratio of the % increase in the speed of the stream to the % decrease in the speed of
the ship?
1) 1 : 2 2) 2 : 1 3) 3 : 2 4) 3 : 4
190
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Work
When we say, A has worked for an hour, we actually refer to the amount of job that is done in
one hour. The same job can probably be done by B in less time, if the speed of doing the job is
more than that of A. Therefore, we can say B is more efficient than A.
This chapter introduces you to the different concepts in Work and problems based on the application
of the concepts.
Definition
Work is defined as the amount of job assigned or the amount of job actually done.
Work is always considered as a whole or 1. There exists an analogy between the time-speed-
distance problems and work.
Work 1 Distance.
Rate at which the work is done = Speed
Number of days required to do the work = Time
3. If A and B can do a piece of work in ‘x’ and ‘y’ days respectively, then working together,
xy x+y
they will take days to finish the work and in one day, they will finish th part of
+
x y xy
the work.
4. To compare the work done by different people, first find the amount of work each can do in
the same time.
5. If the number of men to do a job is changed in the ratio a : b, then the time required to
do the work will be in the ratio b : a, assuming the amount of work done by each of them
in the given time is the same, or they are identical.
6. If two men A and B together can finish a job in ‘x’ days and if A working alone takes ‘a’
days more than A and B working together and B working alone takes ‘b’ days more than A
and B working together then x = ab .
7. To do a piece of work, the number of men employed and the number of days required to do
the work are in inverse proportion, also, the number of men employed and the hours worked
per day are in inverse proportion.
191
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : A group of labourers do a piece of work in 10 days, but five of them are absent and so the
rest do the work in 12 days. Find the original number of labourers.
A : More men, less days
x 12
= 12x – 60 = 10x x = 30 men
x–5 10
Q : If 3 men or 5 women take 26 days to do a work, how long will 7 men and 10 women take?
A : 10 women are equivalent to 6 men.
More men, fewer days
3
x = 26 × = 6 days
13
Q : If 8 men can reap 80 hectares in 24 days, how many hectares can 36 men reap in 30 days?
A : More men, more hectares; more days, more hectares.
x 36 30
= ×
80 8 24
36 30
Number of hectares = 80 × × = 450
8 24
Q : If 30 men working 7 hours per day can do a work in 18 days in how many days will 21 men
working 8 hours a day do the same work?
A : Fewer men, more days; more hrs., fewer days.
x 30 7
= ×
18 21 8
30 7
Number of days = 18 × × = 22.5
21 8
192
Chapter QA
WORK, PIPES AND CISTERN 3.8
Q : Two men and 7 boys can do a piece of work in 14 days. 3 men and 8 boys can do it in 11
THEORY
days. In how many days can 8 men and 6 boys do a work 3 times as big as the first?
A : 2 men + 7 boys in 14 days 28 men + 98 boys in 1 day
3 men + 8 boys in 11 days 33 men + 88 boys in 1 day
x 11 3
= × Number of days = 21 days.
14 22 1
Q : A, B and C can do a work in 6, 8 and 12 days respectively. B and C work together for 2 days,
then A takes C’s place. How long will it take to finish the work?
Q : 2 women, A and B can mow a field in 8 and 12 hours respectively. They work for an hour
alternately, A beginning at 9 a.m. When will the work be completed?
Q : To do a piece of work, B takes 3 times as long as A and C together, and C twice as long as
A and B together. If the three together can complete the work in 10 days, how long would
each take by himself?
A : 3 times B’s daily work = (A + C)’s daily work.
1
4 times B’s daily work = (A + B + C)’s daily work = (adding B’s daily work to both
10
sides)
193
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
1
B’s daily work = th B takes 40 days.
40
Similarly, 2 times C’s daily work = (A + B)’s daily work
1
3 times C’s daily work = (A + B + C)’s daily work =
10
1
C’s daily work = th work. C takes 30 days.
30
– b l = 1 – 7 = 5
1 1 + 1
A’s daily work =
10 40 30 10 120 120
120
A takes = 24 days.
5
Concept Builder 1
1. P does the job in 11 days while Q takes 12 days and R takes 22 days for the same job.
P and Q started working together. But, after two days they left and R had to complete
the job. Find the number of days required to complete the job?
2. A and B can do a piece of work in 10 days, B and C in 12 days, and C and A in 15 days.
In how many days will they finish it together?
3. A can do a piece of work in 10 days. If B is 25% more efficient than A, then find the
number of days required by B to do the same piece of work.
4. A and B can do a piece of work in 12 days. B and C can do it in 15 days; A and C can
do it 20 days. Who among these will take the least time if put to do it alone?
5. A can do a piece of work in 7 days working 9 hours each and B can do it in 6 days work-
2
ing 7 hours each. How long will they take to do the work together, working 8 hours a
5
day?
6. A can do a piece of work in 15 days which B can do in 18 days. In how many days will
they finish the work, both working together?
7. A and B together complete a piece of work in 40 days while B alone can complete the
same work in 60 days. A alone will be able to complete the same work in:
8. X is half as good a workman as Y and together they finish a piece of work in 24 days.
The number of days taken by X alone to finish the work is:
9. P can do a piece of work in 10 days, which Q can finish in 15 days. If they work at it on
alternate days with P begining in how many days the work will be finished.
Answer Key
9. 12 days.
11
8. 72 days. 7. 120 days. days. 6. 8 5. 3 days.
2
3
4. B 3. 8 days. 2. 8 days. days. 1. 16
1
194
Chapter QA
WORK, PIPES AND CISTERN 3.8
THEORY
In the previous section, you have learnt about the concept of work. Pipes and Cisterns is a special
application of the same. Filling or emptying a cistern can be considered as work done.
This section introduces you to problems based on work with relation to pipes and cisterns.
1
1. If an inlet pipe fills a cistern in ‘a’ hours, then th part is filled in 1 hour.
a
The concept of negative work implies work that is destructive in nature. For example, if an
1
outlet pipe empties a cistern in ‘a’ hours, then th part is emptied in 1 hour. In this case,
a
the outlet pipe is doing negative work.
1
2. If pipe A is ‘x’ times bigger than pipe B, then pipe A will take th of the time taken by
x
pipe B to fill the cistern.
mn
3. If A and B fill a cistern in ‘m’ and ‘n’ hours, respectively then together they will take
m+n
m+n
hours to fill the cistern and in one hour th part of the cistern will be filled.
mn
Similarly, ‘A’ and ‘B’ empty a cistern in ‘m’ and ‘n’ hours, respectively, then, together they
m+n m+n
will take hours to empty the cistern and in one hour th part of the cistern will
mn mn
be empty.
4. If an outlet pipe empties the cistern in ‘n’ hours and an inlet pipe fills a cistern in ‘m’ hours
then the net part filled in 1 hour when both the pipes are opened is b l i.e., n – m
1 1
m – n mn
and the cistern will get filled in b l hours.
mn
n–m
For the cistern to get filled, it is necessary that m < n. If m > n, the cistern will never get
filled.
In general, Net part filled of a cistern = (Sum of work done by inlets) – (Sum of work done
by outlets)
5. If an inlet pipe fills a cistern in ‘a’ minutes, takes ‘x’ minutes longer to fill the cistern due
to a leak in the cistern, then the time in which the leak will empty the cistern is given by a
× b1 + l .
a
x
6. If two pipes A and B can fill a cistern in ‘x’ minutes and if A alone can fill it in ‘a’ minutes
more than ‘x’ minutes and B alone can fill it in ‘b’ minutes more than ‘x’ minutes then x =
ab .
195
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : A tank 9 ft. by 5 ft. by 2 ft. has a supply pipe pouring in 576 in3 of water in a minute and
an exhaust pipe emptying it in 3 hours. If the tank is full, and both pipes are open, how many
hours will it take to empty it?
A : Volume of the tank = 9 × 5 × 2 × 12 × 12 × 12 in3
90 × 12 × 12 × 12
Volume of water exhausted in 1 min = = 864 in3
3 × 60
The combined effect of the two pipes in 1 min is (864 – 576)
i.e. 288 in3 of water is removed in 1 min.
90 × 12 × 12 × 12
Time required to empty the tank = = 9 hrs.
288 × 60
Q : Pipes A and B can fill a cistern in 20 and 30 minutes and C can empty it in 15 minutes. If
the three are opened and closed one after the other successively for 1 min each in that order,
how soon will the cistern be filled?
1 1 1 1
A : Part filled in 3 min. = + – = th
20 30 15 60
55
Part filled in 55 × 3 min. = th
60
55 1 58
Part filled in 165 + 1 min. = + = th
60 20 60
58 1 58 + 2 60
Part filled in 166 + 1 min. = + = = = full
60 30 60 60
It takes 167 minutes to fill the cistern.
Q : A bath can be filled by the cold water pipe in 10 minutes and by the hot water pipe in 15
minutes. A person leaves the bathroom after turning on both. He returns just when the bath
should have been full. Finding however, the waste pipe has been open, he closes it. In 4 mins.
more, the bath is full. In what time will the waste water pipe empty it?
ab 150
A : Time taken by the two pipes to fill it = = = 6 minutes.
a+b 25
For six minutes, the three taps worked, and for the last 4 minutes, the first two taps worked
and the bath was full. If x is the time taken to empty the bath, then,
6 6 6 4 4 10 6
+ – + + = 1 = x = 9 mins.
10 15 x 10 15 15 x
196
Chapter QA
WORK, PIPES AND CISTERN 3.8
Q : 4 pipes can fill a reservoir in 15, 20, 30 and 60 hrs. respectively. The first was opened at 6
THEORY
a.m., second at 7 a.m., third at 8 a.m. and fourth at 9 a.m. When will the reservoir be full?
A : Let the time be t hours after 6 a.m.
4t + 3(t – 1) + 2(t – 2) + (t – 3) = 60
t = 7 hrs.
It is filled at 1 p.m.
Q : A barrel contains 36 gallons of beer at 12 noon. One tap draws a pint in every 4 minutes
and another draws a quart every 6 minutes. How much beer will be left at 12 minutes past
8 p.m.? (4 quarts = 8 pints = 1 gallon)
8 × 60 + 12
Beer removed by the first tap = = 123 pints
4
2
Beer removed by the second tap in 492 minutes = × 492 = 164 pints
6
Total beer removed = 287 pints
Quantity of beer remaining = 1 pint.
197
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Concept Builder 2
1. A cistern has a leak which would empty it in 10 hours. A tap is turned on, which admits
4 litres a minute into the cistern, and it is now emptied in 12 hours. How many litres
does the cistern hold?
2. A barrel contains 56 litres of kerosene. It has two taps. One tap draws 500 ml in every 6
minutes. After first 5 litres are drawn from barrel, the second tap starts. It draws 1 litre
in every 5 minutes. How many hours will be taken by both taps to empty the tank?
3. A man fills up a vessel with a pipe in 10 minutes. Incidentally, there is a leak in the vessel
which would empty the vessel in 20 minutes. After how many minutes can the vessel be
filled up, if the pipe and the leak function simultaneously?
4. To fill a cistern, pipes A, B and C takes 2 hrs, 3 hrs and 6 hrs respectively. The time in
hours that the three pipes together will take to fill the cistern is:
5. Two pipes A and B can fill a tank in 6 hrs and 9 hrs respectively. While a third pipe ‘C’
empties the full tank in 3 hours. If all the three pipes operate simultaneously, in how
much time will the tank be emptied?
6. Two pipes A and B can fill a tank in 3 hours and 6 hours respectively. If both the pipes
are opened simultaneously, how much time will be taken to fill the tank?
7. A tap can fill a tank in 45 minutes and anothers tap can empty it in 3 hours. If both taps
are opened at 11.30 am. Then the tank will be filled by:
8. Two pipes A and B can fill a cistern 15 min and 20 min. respectively. Both pipes are
opened the cistern will be filled in just 12 min, if the pipe B is turned off after:
9. A water tank is three-fifth full. Pipe A can fill a tank in 8 minutes and pipe B can empty
it in 5 minutes. If both the pipes are open, how long will it take to empty/fill the tank
completely?
Answer Key
9. 8 mins to empty.
8. 4 min. 7. 12.30 p.m 6. 2 hours. 5. 18 hrs.
4. 1 hr 3. 20 minutes. 2. 4 hours 1. 14400 litres.
198
Chapter QA
WORK, PIPES AND CISTERN 3.8
CLASS EXERCISE
Teaser
A sage stays atop a mountain in the Himalayas. Every morning he starts at 5:00 and reaches
the foothills at 9:00. He travels non-uniformly, walking leisurely at times and at times breaking
into a trot. He also takes rest at some points, but never digresses from his path. In the evening
he starts at 5:00 to climb up in the same manner on the exact same path and reaches the top
exactly at 9:00.
On any given day, will the sage be at any point on his route at the same time in the morning
and evening?
1] Certainly 2] Certainly Not 3] Cannot Say
199
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
A piece of work
1. 5 men complete a piece of work in 25 days. In how much time will 15 men complete the
work?
2. If a man takes 15 days to complete a piece of work, what part of the work will 2 men
complete in 5 days?
3. Some workers complete a piece of work in 60 days. If 8 more workers are employed, they
take 10 days less. What is the original number of workers?
4. Twelve men complete a piece of work in 8 days. Three days after they start, another 3 men
join them. How many days later will they complete the work?
5. Three men can complete a piece of work in 10, 12 and 15 days respectively. They worked
on it together and received a total amount of Rs.4500 for the job. How should they distribute
the amount amongst themselves?
More work
6. Calvin’s father asks Calvin to clear the snow from the sidewalk. Calvin says, “Dad it’ll take
me 8 hours to complete the work! Why don’t you ask Hobbes instead? He is twice as fast;
he’ll finish it in just 4 hours.” “I have a better idea” says Calvin’s father, “Both of you work
at it together.”
a) How long will it take Calvin and Hobbes to complete the work together?
b) Calvin and Hobbes start on the job together at 9 am but after 2 hours Calvin gets bored
and leaves. At what time will Hobbes complete the work?
7. Miss Wormwood asks Calvin to complete an 8-page exercise set in Math. Susie blurts out,
“M’am, shall I do that too? I can complete it in just 2 hours!” Miss Wormwood replies, “Well,
if you help him out, the two of you will finish it in just 1hr 40 min.” Calvin thinks to himself,
“If I take Hobbes’ help, I will finish the task in 4 hours”.
a) If the three of them work at it together, how long will it take them to finish the task?
b) Calvin glances at the exercise and realises he has no clue how to solve it. So he dumps
the task completely on Hobbes. How long will Hobbes take to finish it alone?
8. Calvin and Hobbes together take 20 minutes to build a snowman. Hobbes and Susie together
take 30 minutes for the same while Calvin and Susie together take 40 minutes.
200
Chapter QA
WORK, PIPES AND CISTERN 3.8
Work on pipes
THEORY
For questions 9 and 10: Refer to the following data and answer the questions. Do not carry
additional data provided in a question to the next questions.
10. When the tank becomes half empty, Veeru opens the other outlet pipe which can empty a
full tank in 15 minutes. In how much time (from the start) will the tank be empty?
11. There are 3 pipes P, Q and R, which could fill a certain container in 38, 44 and 28 minutes
respectively. The container is initially empty. Pipe P is opened at 9:41 a.m. 8 minutes later,
pipe Q is opened. How many minutes after this should pipe R be opened so that the con-
tainer will get filled at exactly 10 a.m.?
12. A cistern has 3 pipes P, Q and R. P and Q can fill it in 6 and 5 hours respectively and R
can empty it in 2 hours. If these pipes are opened in order (i.e. P, Q and R) at 6 a.m., 7
a.m. and 8 a.m. respectively, then when will the cistern be empty?
13. 32 workers working 10 hours a day can complete one-third of the work in 8 days. After the
1st day, 32 additional workers were employed and all of them (i.e. the original set of workers
plus the additional workers employeed) worked 9 hours per day. In how many days will the
remaining work be completed?
14. * 20 workers were employed to do a task in 40 days. But some of the workers had to leave
after 16 days. The remaining workers completed the work in 46 days from the day the work
was started initially. How many workers left after 16 days?
15. A man, a woman and a boy can complete a piece of work in 20, 30 and 60 days respectively.
How many boys should join 2 men and 8 women to complete the work in 2 days?
16. 8 women or 6 boys do the work of 4 men. 15 boys and 5 men are employed together to
complete a job in 12 days. How long will 3 men, 4 women and 6 boys take to complete the
job together?
17. * In 10 days, 6 horses and 2 mules complete a task which takes 4 horses and 4 mules 12
days to complete. What is the ratio of rate of work of a horse to that of a mule?
201
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Challengers
1. Ten men started on a job. After some days four men left. So, instead of 40 days the job
took 50 days in all. After how many days did the men leave?
2. Two taps fill a tank in 6 hours and 8 hours respectively. If they are opened turn by turn,
each for an hour starting with the 1st tap, then after how many hours will the tank be full?
3. A king is planning to build a tomb that would take ten masons ten days. Unfortunately, on
the first day only 1 mason is available. On the second day two more join. This continues,
with 2 more masons joining in the work every day till the work is complete. How many days
will it take to build the tomb?
4. There is an empty tank to be filled with water using the three pipes ‘x’, ‘y’ & ‘z’. Pipe ‘x’ &
‘y’ alone can fill the tank completely in 30 hours and 45 hours respectively. If the pipes ‘x’
& ‘y’ are opened in alternate hours along with ‘z’ (i.e. in the first hour pipes ‘x’ & ‘z’ fill the
tank, in the second hour pipes ‘y’ & ‘z’ fill the tank & so on), then the tank is 70% filled in
15 hours. If the supply of through pipe ‘z’ is 75% of the original supply when it is opened
along with pipe ‘x’ or pipe ‘y’, then what is the time taken by pipe ‘z’ alone to fill the tank
completely?
1) 45 hours 2) 40.5 hours 3) 56.25 hours 4) 50 hours
5. 11 men and 8 women can complete a piece of work in 5 days, whereas 11 boys and 3 women
can complete the same work in 6 days. In how many days will 1 man, working along-with
1 woman and 1 boy complete the work?
1) 11 days 2) 30 days 3) 26 days 4) 21 days
202
Chapter QA
WORK, PIPES AND CISTERN 3.8
PRACTICE EXERCISE-1
1. A is thrice as good a workman as B and so takes 60 days less than B for doing a job. Find
the time in which they can do it together.
1 1 3
1) 20 days 2) 21 days 3) 22 days 4) 23 days
2 2 4
2. Two pipes can fill a cistern in 10 and 12 hours respectively. A third pipe can empty the
cistern in 15 hours. If all of the three pipes are opened simultaneously how much time will
they take to completely fill the cistern?
4 3 4 7
1) 8 hours 2) 4 hours 3) 7 hours 4) 4 hours
7 7 8 8
3. 3 pipes can fill a reservoir in 10, 15 and 20 hours respectively. If the three taps are opened
one after another in the given order, with a certain fixed time gap between them, the reservoir
fills in 5 hours. Find the time gap.
1 1 3
1) hr 2) hr 3) hr 4) 1 hr
2 4 4
4. A alone completes some work in 18 days and B alone can do it in 16 days. They work to-
gether for 5 days, then B quits and rejoins after 3 days, when A quits the work completely.
Find the number of days required to finish the job.
1) 9 days 2) 10 days 3) 13 days 4) None of these
5. A can paint a wall in 11 days. How long would it take (approximately) for B and C to paint
the same wall together if it is known that to paint a smaller wall, individually, A took 7 days,
B took 10 days and C took 12 days?
1) 9 days 2) 15 days
3) 60 days 4) Cannot be determined
6. 8 men and 3 women finished a piece of work in 8 days. 2 men and 12 women can also
finish the work in 8 days. How many days will 6 men and 6 women take to finish the same
work?
1) 10 days 2) 8 days 3) 6 days 4) None of these
203
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
7. There are 16 workers in a coal mine factory. All of them start working for a project. After
1 1
working for rd of the estimated time, they realise that only th of the work is done. If
3 4
2
they finish the entire work in rd of the original time, how many extra workers they have
3
employed?
1) 40 workers 2) 20 workers 3) 32 workers 4) 24 workers
DIRECTIONS for questions 9 and 10: Refer to the data below and answer the questions that
follow.
Sita can complete a project in 4 days and if the same project is done by Gita she needs 5 days.
Their sister Rita can do a project in 4 days while for the same project Gita requires 3 days. All
of them working together can finish a particular project together in 25 days.
9. How many days are required by Rita to complete the project alone?
1) 200 days 2) 145 days 3) 150 days 4) 100 days
10. How many days are required by Gita if she works alone to complete the project?
1) 175 days 2) 75 days 3) 100 days 4) 150 days
11. Three pipes can fill a pond in 4, 6 and 8 hours respectively. In addition to these three pipes,
a fourth pipe was used and all these 4 pipes used together filled the pond in 2 hours. It is
also known that the first two pipes were opened one hour prior to opening the other two
pipes. Find the number of hours required for the fourth pipe to fill the pond individually.
1) 24 2) 8 3) 4 4) None of these
12. Two pipes A and B can separately fill a cistern in 15 and 20 mins respectively and the waste
pipe C can carry off 10 litres per minute. If all the pipes are opened when the cistern is full,
it is emptied in 2 hours. How many litres does the cistern hold?
1) 80 litres 2) 90 litres 3) 56 litres 4) 40 litres
204
Chapter QA
WORK, PIPES AND CISTERN 3.8
13. Mr.X has to build a wall 1000 metres long in 50 days. He employs 56 men but at the end
14. A supply of water lasts for 150 days, if 7.5 gallons leak out every day, but only for 100 days
if 15 gallons leak out daily. What is the total quantity of water in the supply?
1) 2250 gallons 2) 1125 gallons 3) 3350 gallons 4) 1250 gallons
(Past CAT question)
15. If 200 soldiers eat 10 tonnes of food in 200 days, how much will 20 soldiers eat in 20 days?
1) 1 ton 2) 10 kg 3) 100 kg 4) 50 kg
(Past CAT question)
16. A group of workers was put on a job. From the second day onwards, one worker was with-
drawn each day. The job was finished when the last worker was withdrawn. Had no worker
been withdrawn at any stage, the group would have finished the job in two thirds the time.
How many workers were there in the group?
1) 2 2) 3 3) 5 4) 10
(Past CAT question)
17. P, Q and R are the three workers assigned to a particular work. They can finish the work
individually in 8, 12 and 16 days respectively. On any given day, all the three do not work
together. Also no worker can work on more than two consecutive days. What is the minimum
number of days in which the work will be completed?
4 3 5 3
1) 4 2) 5 3) 5 4) 5
7 5 9 7
18. Three groups—A, B and C—are required to complete the same job individually. Group A con-
sists of 1 man and 3 women, group B consists of 2 men and 3 women and group C consists
of both men and women. The number of days required by groups A, B and C to individually
complete the job are in the ratio 6 : 4 : 3. If, instead of three groups, all the men work
together and all the women work together to do the same job, which of the following cannot
be the ratio of the number of days taken by the group of men and women?
1) 1 : 2 2) 4 : 5 3) 2 : 1 4) 5 : 4
205
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
19. Hitler and Mussolini are working separately on two assignments that are identical in all
respects. Hitler takes 8 days to complete the assignment while Mussolini takes 12 days to
complete the assignment while working alone. If the both of them start working on their
assignments at the same time, after how many days will the remaining work to be done by
Mussolini be exactly double the remaining work to be done by Hitler?
20. Person A was given a certain job to be completed in 20 days. But after working for 5 days,
he was asked to finish the job in total 15 days. For this, he included person B to join him
from the 6th day onwards such that they would be able to finish the job exactly at the end
of 15 days. But after the 10th day, they were asked to finish the job in total 13 days. So, A
included another person C who would join them from the 11th day onwards such that the
work would be completed exactly at the end of 13 days. Had all three been working together
from the beginning, how many days would they have taken to finish the job?
21. Three friends - A, B and C - were assigned to do a certain job together. A alone can do it
in 15 days, B alone can do it 10 days and C alone can do it in 12 days. Initially, all three
started working together on the job. After some time, C left the job and A and B worked
together to finish the job. They received a total of Rs.12000 for finishing the job and A got
Rs. 1300 more than C. How much did B earn (in Rs.)?
206
Chapter QA
WORK, PIPES AND CISTERN 3.8
PRACTICE EXERCISE-2
DIRECTIONS for questions 1 to 12: Choose the correct alternative.
1
1. 3 women and 4 boys together can finish a piece of work in 2 days. 4 men and 2 boys
2
together can finish the same work in 2 days. Also, 2 men and 3 women together can finish it
1
in 2 days. How long would it take 1 man, 1 woman and 1 boy working together at double
2
their efficiencies to complete the work?
4 4 8 8
1) 1 days 2) 2 days 3) 3 days 4) 4 days
13 13 13 13
3. A, B and C can finish a project in 9, 12 and 15 days respectively. They decide to take turns
and complete the work with A alone working on Monday, B alone on Tuesday, followed by
C alone on Wednesday and so on. What fraction of the work is done by C?
2 4 1 16 4
1) 2) 3) 4) 5)
9 15 3 45 45
4. In a shoe manufacturing factory, 18 men manufacture 20 shoes in 10 days working for 7.5
hours a day. How long will it take for 36 men to manufacture 40 shoes working 6 hours a
day? It is also known that 4 men in the latter case do as much work as 6 men in the former.
20 25 30
1) days 2) days 3) days
3 3 3
35
4) days 5) Cannot be determined
3
5. Taps A and C can fill a tank in 5 and 7 hrs respectively. Taps B and D can drain a full tank in
6 and 8 hrs. respectively. Taps A and B are opened at 6 a.m. and 6.30 a.m. respectively, till
65% of the tank is filled. Then, C and D are also opened. At what time will the tank get filled?
207
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
6. A tank has four taps A, B, C, D. A and C are inlets and can fill the tank in 4 and 6 hours
respectively. B and D are outlets and can drain the completely filled tank in 5 and 7 hours
respectively. A is opened at 12:00 noon and B, C, D are opened after a gap of one hour
each, in that order. In how many hours, will the tank be full?
7. There are ten water tanks T1, T2,..., T10 and another tank U each of capacity 6000 litres. A
common inlet pipe giving 100 litres/min fills the tanks according to the following scheme.
While T1 gets filled, half the inlet water goes into it, half of the remaining inlet water goes
into T2, half of the remaining goes into T3 and so on till T10. Whatever is left out of the inlet
water goes into U. After T1 gets filled, no more water goes into it and half the inlet water
goes into T2, half of the remaining goes into T3, and so on till T10 and then all the remaining
inlet water goes into U. This procedure goes on as each tank gets filled. How long does it
take to fill U?
8. There are three pipes in a tank which can work as both inlet and outlet pipes. Their rate of
filling or emptying a tank are in the ratio 2 : 3 : 6. The largest pipe can fill the tank alone
in 3 hrs. Initially the tank is empty. The first pipe is used as an outlet and second and third
pipe are used as inlets for the first hour. In the second hour, the second pipe works as an
outlet pipe and the first and the third are used as inlet pipes. In the third hour the third
pipe is used as an outlet and the first two as inlet and so on. The process is continued till
the tank is full. The total time required to fill the tank is:
1) 5 hrs 2) 4 hrs 3) 3.5 hrs 4) None of these
9. The work done by a man, a woman and a child is in the ratio of 3 : 2 : 1. There are 20
men, 30 women and 36 children in a factory. Their weekly wages amount to Rs.780, which is
divided in the ratio of work done by the men, women and children. What will be the wages
of 15 men, 21 women and 30 children for 2 weeks?
10. A can do a piece of work in 8 days which B and C can do in 12 and 16 days respectively.
If they work on alternate days, then which of the following is true?
I. If A started the work on the first day followed by B and C, then the work will be
finished on the 10th day.
II. If B started the work on the first day followed by C and A, then the work will be
finished on the 11th day.
III. If C started the work on the first day followed by A and B, then the work will be
finished on the 11th day.
1) I 2) I & II 3) II 4) III
208
Chapter QA
WORK, PIPES AND CISTERN 3.8
11. Pipes P, Q and R are attached to a tank and each can act as either an inlet or outlet pipe.
DIRECTIONS for questions 12 and 13: Refer to the data below and answer the questions that
follow.
The boiler tank in a chemical factory holds 105 litres. 5 tanks working together each having one-fifth
the capacity of the boiler tank can fill in ‘hard water’ at same rates in the boiler tank in 2 hours.
Let us suppose the outlet of the two of the small tanks work as inlet pipes, two other small tanks
work as outlet pipes and the fifth small tank fills in the main ‘boiler’ at half its efficiency.
12. What is the number of hours taken to fill in the main boiler when all the pipes are opened
at once?
1) 1 hour 2) 5 hours 3) 20 hours 4) 25 hours
13. Only three pipes are working, two at their full efficiency and the third one at half its efficiency
and all three are acting as inlet pipes. If all the three pipes are opened alternately (with only
one pipe operating at a time) to fill the boiler such that each small tank fills ‘hard water’ in
the main boiler for equal time, then the number of hours taken to fill the boiler to half its
capacity is:
1) 2 hours 2) 4 hours 3) 6 hours 4) 8 hours
14. A water tank has three taps A, B and C. A fills 4 buckets in 24 minutes, B fills 8 buckets in
1 hour and C fills 2 buckets in 20 minutes. If all the taps are opened together, a full tank is
emptied in 2 hours. If a bucket can hold 5 litres of water, what is the capacity of the tank?
1) 120 litres 2) 240 litres 3) 180 litres 4) 60 litres
(Past CAT question)
15. There is a leak in the bottom of the tank. This leak can empty a full tank in 8 hours. When
the tank is full, a tap is opened into the tank which admits 6 litres per hour and the tank
is now emptied in 12 hours. What is the capacity of the tank?
1) 28.8 litres 2) 36 litres 3) 144 litres 4) Indeterminate
(Past CAT question)
209
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
16. One man can do as much work in one day as a woman can do in 2 days. A child does one-
third the work done by a woman in a day. If an estate-owner hires 39 pairs of hands - men,
women and children in the ratio 6 : 5 : 2 and pays them a total of Rs. 1,113 at the end of
the day’s work. What must the daily wages of a child be, if the wages are proportional to
the amount of work done?
1) Rs. 14 2) Rs. 5 3) Rs. 20 4) Rs. 7
(Past CAT question)
17. 3 men and 4 women together finish a certain job in 11 days. However, all of them did not
work for all the 11 days. The ratio of the number of days that the 3 men and 4 women did
not work is same as the ratio of the efficiency of 1 man and 1 woman. What is the ratio of
the number of days that the 3 men and 4 women worked?
Note: Either all three men worked together or didn’t work together. Similarly, either all four
women worked together or didn’t work together. It is also known that 5 men working to-
gether can complete the entire job in 3 days and 2 women working together can complete
the entire job in 12.5 days.
1) 5 : 3 2) 1 : 5 3) 3 : 5 4) 5 : 1
18. B is 20% less efficient than C and A is 20% more efficient than C. The number of days tak-
en by A and B together to complete a particular work is one less than the number of days
taken by B and C together to complete the same work. If C works alone for as many days
as the number of days required for A and B to complete the work together, what percentage
of work will C complete in those many days?
1) 40% 2) 50% 3) 60% 4) 75%
19. 5 men can mow 500 m2 of a lawn in 10 days whereas 15 women can mow 1500 m2 of the
lawn in 20 days. In how many days can 6 men and 2 women mow 2100 m2 of the lawn?
20. Jericho started working at a certain rate and finished half of the work in 16 days. Then he
increased his efficiency by 100% each day as compared to the previous day. On which day
will he complete the work, counting from the day he began?
210
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Races
Basic terminology in races
Races is an application of Time, Speed and Distance.
A contest of speed between participants is called a race.
The point from where a race begins is called the starting point and the point where the race
finishes is called the winning post or finishing point or a goal.
If all the persons contesting a race reach the winning post at exactly the same time, then the
race is said to be a dead-heat race.
Important Concepts and Formulae related to Races
1. Start distance: ‘A gives B a start of x metres’, implies that, if the distance between the
starting point and finishing point is L metres, A covers L metres while B covers L – x metres.
e.g., In a 100 metre race, A gives B a start of 10 metres means, while A runs 100 metres,
B runs 100 – 10 = 90 metres.
2. Beat distance: ‘A beats B by x metres’, implies that, if the distance between the starting
point and finishing point is L metres, A wins the race by covering L metres, while B covers
L – x metres only.
3. Start time: ‘A gives B a start of t seconds’, implies that, A starts the race t seconds after B
starts from the starting point.
4. Beat time: ‘A beats B by t seconds’, implies that, A and B start together from the starting
point, but A reaches the finishing point t seconds before B finishes.
Note: (3) & (4) both imply that B takes t seconds more than A to finish the distance.
5 A beats B by ‘x’ metres or ‘t’ seconds means, B runs ‘x’ metres in ‘t’ seconds.
6. Winner’s distance = Length of the race.
7. Distance covered by loser = Winner’s distance – (Beat distance + Start distance)
8. Time taken by winner = Time taken by loser – (Beat time + Start time)
Winner's Time Loser's Time Beat Time + Start time
9. = =
Loser's Distance Winner's Distance Beat Distance + Start distance
10. If a race ends in a dead heat, beat time = 0 and beat distance = 0.
11. Two persons starting at the same time and from the same point along a circular path will be
together again for the first time, when the faster gains one complete round over the other.
Length of race course
Time taken by faster person to complete one round over the other =
Relative Speed
12. Two persons, starting at the same time from the same point along a circular path, will be
together again for the first time at the same starting point, at a time which is the LCM of
the time taken by each to complete a round.
211
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
13. Three persons, starting at the same time and from the same point along a circular path, will
be together for the first time after the start at a time which is equal to the LCM of the time
taken by the fastest to gain a complete round over each of the other two.
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : A can give B a 40 metres start and C a 70 metres start, in a one km race. How many metres
start can B give C in a 1 km race?
A : A runs 1000 m, while B runs (1000 – 40) or 960 m.
A runs 1000 m, while C runs (1000 – 70) or 930 m.
B runs 960 m, while C runs 930 m.
1000 × 930 3
B runs 1000 m, while C runs = 968 m.
960 4
B can give C b 1000 – 968 l or 31
3 1
m. start.
4 4
Q : In a km race, A beats B by 40 metres or 7 seconds. Find A’s time over the course.
A : Here B runs 40 metres in 7 seconds.
B runs 1000 m in 1000 × 7 = 175 seconds.
40
Hence, A’s time over the course = (175 – 7) = 168 seconds.
Alternatively,
Winner's Time Beat Time + Start time
By formula, =
Loser's Distance Beat Distance + Start distance
A's time 7+0 7
= A’s Time = × 960 = 168 seconds.
1000 – 40 40 + 0 40
212
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-I 3.9
THEORY
start, B wins by 40 m. Find the time that each takes to run a km?
A : Suppose A takes x seconds and B takes y seconds to run 1000 m.
960 960x
Then x + 19 = and + 30 = y
Q : Two men, A and B, walk around a circle 1200 m in circumference. A walks at the rate of 150
m/min. and B at the rate of 80 m/min. If they both start at the same time from the same
point, and walk in the same direction,
(a) When will they first be together again at the starting point?
(b) When will they be together again?
1200
A : (a) A makes one complete round of the circle in = 8 minutes,
150
1200
B in = 15 minutes
80
That is, after every 8 minutes, A is at the starting point and after every 15 minutes B
is at the starting point.
Now, A and B will be together again at the starting point at the end of the time during
which each can make an exact number of rounds. Hence, the required time is the LCM
of 8 and 15 minutes, i.e., 120 minutes or 2 hours.
(b) A and B will be together again for the first time when A has gained one complete
round over B.
Now, A gains (150 – 80) or 70 metres on B in 1 minute.
1200 1
A will gain 1200 metres in or 17 minutes
70 7
1
A and B will be together in 17 minutes.
7
Q : Three men A, B and C walk around a circle, 1760 metres in circumference, at the rate of 160,
120 and 105 m/minute, respectively. If they all start together and walk in the same direction,
when will they first be together again?
A : A, the quickest man gains one complete round on C, the slowest man, in b l or 32
1760
160 – 105
min. A gains one complete round on B, the next slowest man, in b l or 44 mins.
1760
160 – 120
Thus, A and C are together after every 32 minutes and A and B are together after every 44
minutes. Hence, A, B and C will be together in the time which is the LCM of 32 and 44, i.e.,
352 minutes or 5 hours 52 minutes.
213
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Concept Builder 1
1. In a 100 m race, A can give B a start of 10 m and C 19 m. In the same race, B can give
C a start of:
2. A and B start from the same point to run in opposite directions round a circular path 550
yards in length, A giving B a start of 100 yards. They pass each other when A has run 250
yards. Who will come first to the starting point and at what distance will they be apart?
3
3. A runs 1 times faster than B. A gives B a start of 120 metres. How far must the winning
8
post be so that it may be a dead heat?
4. How much time does a racer X take running on a circular track of 440 metres in anticlock-
wise direction to meet racer Y who runs at double the speed of X in the anticlockwise
direction. They start running in the same race from the diametrically opposite ends given
that the speed of X is 19.8 kmph?
5. Red and black ants are running on a rectangular frame of length 7 cm and breadth 3 cm.
Red ant is running with a speed of 60 cm/min and black ant is running with a speed of
40 cm/min. How much time (in seconds) will it take for both of them to meet at starting
point if both of them start running from the same point?
6. Two boys running in opposite directions meet each other after 10 minutes on travelling a
distance of 2.4 km. Their speeds are in the ratio 3 : 5. Find the time required for both of
them to meet each other on a circular track of 2.4 km, for the first time if both of them
start at the same time from the same point and move in the same direction.
7. The speeds of A and B are 100 m/s and 75 m/s, respectively. If A and B runs a race of
500 metres, then A beats B by what distance?
Answer Key
125 metres 7.
40 minutes. 6.
60 sec. 5.
40 sec. 4.
440 metres 3.
A, 10 yards 2.
10 m 1.
214
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-I 3.9
Clocks
THEORY
This section introduces you to the application of the concepts of Time, Speed, Distance & races
to the problems on clocks.
360°
1. 1 minute space = . (As 360° of the circle is divided into 60 minutes)
60
2. In one minute, the minute hand moves 6°.
360 360 1°
3. In one minute, the hour hand moves = =
12 × 60 720 2
(As there are 12 hours of 60 minutes each) Thus, in one minute the minute hand gains
1°
5 over the hour hand.
2
4. In every hour,
(a) the hands coincide once (0° apart).
(b) the hands are twice at right angles (90° apart) and in these positions the hands are 15
minute spaces apart.
(c) the hands point in opposite directions (180° apart) once and in this position, the hands
are 30 minute spaces apart.
5. The hands are in the same straight line when they are coincident or opposite to each other.
6. The hands coincide 11 times in every 12 hours (between 11 and 1 o’clock there is a common
position at 12 o’clock). Hence, the hands coincide 22 times in a day.
7. If both the hands start moving together from the same position, both the hands will coincide
360 × 2 5
after = 65 minutes.
11 11
8. The hands of a clock are at right angles twice in every hour, but in 12 hours they are at
right angles 22 times since there are two common positions in every 12 hours.
9. Interchangeable positions of minute hand and hour hand occur when the original interval
60
between the two hands is minute spaces or a multiple of this.
13
215
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Incorrect clocks
A clock which gains or loses time is called an incorrect clock. In incorrect clocks both hands
5
coincide at an interval which is not equal to 65 minutes.
11
In a slow clock, i.e., a clock that loses time:
5
Total time lost in T hours = (T × 60) f
x – 65 11 p
minutes,
x
where x is the time in which the hands of the incorrect clock coincide.
Also, for a fast clock, i.e., a clock that gains time:
5
Total time gained in T hours = (T × 60) f
65 11 – x p
minutes,
x
where x is the time in which the hands of the incorrect clock coincide.
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : At what time between 4 and 5 will the hands of a watch be at right angles?
A : At 4 o’clock the hands are 20 minutes apart. They will be at right angles when there is a space
of 15 minutes between them. This will happen twice (i) when the minute hand has gained (20
– 15) or 5 minutes; (ii) when the minute hand has gained (20 + 15) or 35 minutes.
5 × 60 5
The minute hand gains 5 minutes in = 5 minutes.
55 11
5
i.e., 5 minutes past 4.
11
and
35 × 60 2
The minute hand gains 35 minutes in = 38 minutes.
55 11
2
i.e., 38 minutes past 4.
11
216
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-I 3.9
Q : At what time between 4 and 5 will the hands of a watch point in opposite directions?
THEORY
A : They will be opposite to each other when there is a space of 30 minutes between them.
This will happen when the minute hand gains (30 + 20) minutes = 50 minutes.
Q : My watch, which gains uniformly, is 2 minutes slow at noon on Sunday, and is 4 minutes 48
seconds fast at 2 p.m. on the following Sunday. When was it correct?
A : From Sunday noon to the following Sunday 2 p.m. = 7 days 2 hours = 170 hours.
48 48 4
The watch gains 2 + 4 + = 6 + minutes or 6 minutes in 170 hours.
60 60 5
The watch will show the correct time when it has gained 2 minutes.
2
The watch gains 2 minutes in × 170 or 50 hours.
4
65
Now, 50 hours = 2 days and 2 hours. The watch will show the correct time after 2 days and
2 hours from Sunday noon, i.e., at 2 p.m. on Tuesday.
Concept Builder 2
1. From noon, by how many degrees has the minute hand moved to 2 : 40 p.m.?
2. In 36 hours, how many times will the hands of the clock coincide?
3. How many minutes does a watch gain per day, if its hands coincide after every 60 min-
utes?
4. How many degrees does an hour hand move in 20 minutes?
5. What is the angle between the minute hand and the hour hand of a clock when the time
is 7:30?
Answer Key
45° 5.
10° 4.
11
mins 130 3.
10
33 times 2.
960° 1.
217
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Calendar
The Solar Year consists of 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes. In the calendar known as Julian
1
Calendar, arranged in 47 BC by Julius Caesar, the year was taken as being of 365 days and in
4
order to get rid of the odd quarter of a day, an extra or intercalary day was added once in every
fourth year and this was called Bissextile or Leap Year. But as the Solar Year is 11 minutes 12
seconds less than a quarter of a day, it followed in a course of years that the Julian Calendar
became inaccurate by several days and in 1582 AD, this difference amounted to 10 days. Pope
Gregory XIII determined to rectify this, and devised the calendar now known as the Gregorian
Calendar. He dropped or cancelled these 10 days – October 5th being called October 15th and
made centurial years leap years only once in 4 centuries – so that whilst 1700, 1800 and 1900
were to be ordinary years, 2000 was a leap year. This modification brought the Gregorian System
into such close exactitude with the Solar Year that there is only a difference of 26 seconds which
amounts to a day in 3323 years. This is the new style. It was ordered by an Act of Parliament
to be adopted in England in 1752, 170 years after its formation and is now used throughout the
civilized world.
1. An ordinary year contains 365 days, i.e. 52 weeks and 1 odd day.
2. A leap year contains 366 days, i.e. 52 weeks and 2 odd days.
4. First January 1 AD was Monday. Therefore, we must count days from Sunday, i.e. Sunday for
0 odd days, Monday for 1 odd day, Tuesday for 2 odd days and so on.
5. February in an ordinary year gives no odd day, but in a leap year gives one odd day.
218
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-I 3.9
SOLVED EXAMPLES
THEORY
Q : What day of the week was 20th June 1837 ?
Q : How many times does the 29th day of the month occur in 400 consecutive years?
A : In 400 consecutive years there are 97 leap years. Hence, in 400 consecutive years February
has the 29th day 97 times and the remaining eleven months have the 29th day 400 × 11 or
4400 times.
Therefore, the 29th day of the month occurs (4400 + 97) or 4497 times.
Q : Today is 3rd November. The day of the week is Monday. This is a leap year. What will be the
day of the week on this date after 3 years?
A : This is a leap year. So, none of the next 3 years will be leap years. Each year will give one
odd day so the day of the week will be 3 odd days beyond Monday i.e. it will be Thursday.
219
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
220
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-I 3.9
CLASS EXERCISE
Teaser
You have two wooden sticks each of which burns completely in an hour. You have a match box
with many matches to light the sticks. The sticks are of uneven density so they don't burn evenly
(for instance, in half an hour not necessarily half a stick is burnt).
How can you use these sticks to measure exactly 45 minutes?
221
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Races
1. When Harry runs half a kilometre, how far will Terry have run, if both start together?
2. If both start together, how much distance will Harry have to run to gain a lead of 150 m?
3. If Terry starts 250 metres ahead, how much further will he reach before Harry catches him?
5. A gives B a start of 100 m in a 600 m race. If the ratio of their speed is 5:4 who will win
and by how much?
7. * In a race, if Shahid gives Saif a start of 100 metres, Shahid wins by 30 sec. If he gives
Saif a start of 150 metres, he still wins but by 15 sec. Find Saif’s speed (in m/min).
8. * In a 100m race, if Raj gives Rohit a start of 10 seconds, Raj wins by 5m. If he gives Rohit
a start of 10m, he wins by 5 seconds. What is Rohit’s speed?
Every morning A, B and C go for a jog on a circular racing track 300 m long.
9. If A runs clockwise at 60 m/min and B runs clockwise at 100 m/min, starting from the same
point, when and where will they meet for the first time?
10. If A runs clockwise at 60 m/min and B runs clockwise at 100 m/min, starting from the same
point, when will they meet at the starting point for the first time?
11. If A runs clockwise at 60 m/min and C runs anti-clockwise at 40 m/min, starting from the
same point, when and where will they meet for the first time?
12. If A runs clockwise at 60 m/min and C runs anti-clockwise at 40 m/min, starting from the
same point, where will A be when they meet for the first time?
13. If A runs clockwise at 60 m/min and C runs anticlockwise at 40 m/min, starting from dia-
metrically opposite points, when and where will they meet for the second time?
14. If A runs clockwise at 60 m/min and B runs clockwise at 100 m/min, starting from the same
point and if they keep running infinitely, at how many points will they keep meeting?
222
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-I 3.9
15. If A runs clockwise at 60 m/min and C runs anti-clockwise at 40 m/min, starting from the
THEORY
same point and if they keep running infinitely, at how many points will they keep meeting?
16. A, B and C start from the same point at the same time in the same direction and move
along a circular track of length 120 m at speeds of 5 m/s, 3 m/s and 2 m/s respectively.
17. A, B and C start from the same point at the same time and move along a circular track of
length 112 m at speeds of 5 m/s, 3 m/s and 2 m/s respectively. B and C move in the same
direction and A moves in the opposite direction.
a. After how much time will they meet for the first time?
b. After how much time will they meet for the first time at the starting point?
c. If they keep running infinitely, at how many points will they keep meeting.
18. * A, B and C start driving at speeds of 15, 24 and 42 kmph, from the same point and in
the same direction, around a circular track of length 360 km. When and where will all three
meet again?
Clocks
Answer questions 19 – 27 assuming a standard clock with 12 hours marked on its face:
19. What are the speeds (in degrees/minute) of the hour and the minute hand of a clock?
20. When will the hour and the minute hand of a clock first be together after 4 o’clock?
21. When will the hour and the minute hand of a clock first be at right angles after 8 o’clock?
22. When will the hour and the minute hand of a clock first point in opposite directions after
noon?
23. When will the hour and the minute hand of a clock first be together after 11 o’clock?
24. What is the smaller angle between the hour and the minute hand at 9.20?
25. *What is the smaller angle between the hour and the minute hand at 3.40?
26. *A watch was running 7 minutes behind time on Monday at noon. It was running 10 minutes
ahead of time next Monday at 2.00 pm. If it showed the correct time exactly once during
the week, on which day and at what time did that happen?
27. * When will the hour and minute hands of a clock be at right angles for the second time
after 2 pm?
223
Calendar
29. * In a certain year, January had exactly 4 Mondays and 4 Fridays. What was the day on
Gandhi Jayanti (2nd Oct) the previous year?
Challengers
2. Hritik, Abhishek and John run a race starting from the same point. They run at the speeds
of 200, 300 and 400 m/min respectively. Abhishek being faster than Hritik, starts 10 minutes
after Hritik. John being the fastest starts even later. Abhishek and John overtake Hritik at
the same time, how many minutes after Abhishek does John start?
3. The rim of a clock is divided into 60 equal divisions. At a certain point in time, the second
hand is exactly 1 division ahead of the minute hand. After how long will they next meet?
1) 58 sec 2) 59 sec 3) 60 sec 4) 61 sec
4. A and B start jogging at the same moment, from the same point (but in opposite directions)
along a circular track of length 500 metres. Initially, A jogs at 90 m/min while B jogs at 135
m/min. Every time they meet each other, they exchange speeds and reverse directions. When
they meet at the starting point for the first time, how much distance will A have jogged in
total?
1) 1200 m 2) 1500 m 3) 1 km 4) Cannot be determined
224
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-I 3.9
PRACTICE EXERCISE
DIRECTIONS for questions 1 to 14: Choose the correct alternative.
1. Ram and Shyam can run at the speeds of 45 m/min and 54 m/min respectively. They start
from a point on a circular track of circumference 1980 m in the opposite direction. On meet-
ing, they turn around and run in opposite directions. Which of the following is a possible
distance on the track between their two meeting points?
1) 1080 m 2) 980 m 3) 1100 m 4) 1030 m
2. A and B run a km race and A wins by 60 seconds. A and C run a km race and A wins by
375 metres. B and C run a km race and B wins by 30 seconds. Find the time each takes to
run a km.
1 1 1
1) 2 min., 3 min., 4 min. 2) 3 min., 4 min., 4 min.
2 2 2
1 1 1 1
3) 3 min., 4 min., 5 min. 4) 4 min., 5 min., 6 min.
2 2 2 2
1
3. Two men, A and B, run a 4 km race on a circular course of km. If their speeds are as
4
5:4, how often does the winner pass the other?
1) Once 2) Twice 3) Thrice 4) Four times
4. Two cyclists start a race at 3 p.m. around a circular track. The first goes round once in 3
minutes 12 seconds and the second in 3 minutes 30 seconds. Find at what time they will
again meet at the starting point.
1) 4:52 p.m. 2) 3:06 p.m. 3) 9:12 p.m. 4) 3:50 p.m.
5. I want my watch which gains 1 minute every 15 hours to show the correct time after exactly 24
hours. How many minutes slow should I set my watch at the beginning of the 24 hours?
1) 1.6 2) 2 3) 1.06 4) 1.55
6. A man, who went out between five and six o’clock and returned between six and seven
o’clock, found that the hands of the watch had exchanged places. When did he go out?
4 2
1) 32 minutes past 5 o’clock. 2) 27 minutes past 5 o’clock.
13 13
3 5
3) 37 minutes past 5 o’clock. 4) 31 minutes past 5 o’clock.
13 13
7. Determine the time between 7 a.m. and 8 a.m. when the hands of a clock will be in the
same straight line but not coincide.
5 5
1) 7 hours 5 min 2) 7 hours 3 min
11 11
3 7
3) 7 hours 7 min 4) 7 hours 7 min
11 11
225
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
8. Find the time between 5 and 6 o’clock when the hands of a clock are 3 minutes apart.
6
1) 24 minutes past 5 2) 30 minutes past 5
11
6
3) Both (1) and (2) 4) 2 minutes past 5
11
9. A clock loses 5 seconds an hour and is set right on Sunday at noon. What time will it indicate
on the following Monday at noon?
1) 11.56 a.m. 2) 11.58 a.m. 3) 12.02 p.m. 4) 12.04 p.m.
10. Ram was born on the first Monday of March 1952. Then on which date was he born?
1) 1st 2) 3rd 3) 5th 4) 2nd
12. A race is designed such that the person who completes twenty rounds of the circular field track of
50 meter radius first wins the race. Irrespective of the time taken everybody has completed the race.
A, B and C were among the participants. A has overtaken B (for the first time) after A completed
4
th of his 10th round and B has overtaken C (for the first time) in exactly the middle of
5
B's 12th round. If C has taken 30 minutes to complete the race then what was the speed of
A? It is assumed that the running speed of participants remains constant throughout the race.
[m/m = meter/minute]
1) 236 m/m 2) 246 m/m 3) 256 m/m 4) 266 m/m
9
13. If the hands of the clock coincide after every 66 minutes, then how many minutes do
11
the clock gain or lose in an entire day?
1) 30 minutes, gains 2) 30 minutes, loses
8 8
3) 32 minutes, gains 4) 32 minutes, loses
11 11
1
14. In a 2 km race on a circular course of of a km, A overtakes B in the middle of his 6th
4
round. By what distance will A win at the same rate of running?
2 18 4 11
1) km 2) km 3) km 4) km
9 11 11 9
226
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-I 3.9
Directions for questions 15 to 18: Answer the following questions based on the information given.
15. What is the point that coincides with M0 along the course?
1) M1 2) M2 3) M3 4) M4
(Past CAT question)
16. What is the shortest distance between M1 and M2 along the course?
1) 11 km 2) 7 2 3) 7 km 4) 14 km
(Past CAT question)
17. What is the shortest distance between M1 and M3 along the course?
1) 22 km 2) 14 2 3) 22 2 4) 14 km
(Past CAT question)
18. What is the total distance travelled by A when they meet at M3?
1) 77 km 2) 66 km 3) 99 km 4) 88 km
19. In a watch, the minute hand crosses the hour hand for the third time exactly after every 3
hours, 18 minutes, 15 seconds of watch time. What is the time gained or lost by this watch
in one day?
1) 14 min 10 sec, lost 2) 13 min 50 sec, lost
3) 13 min 20 sec, gained 4) 14 min 40 sec, gained
(Past CAT question)
20. In a mile race, Akshay can be given a start of 128 metres by Bhairav. If Bhairav can give
Chinmay a start of 4 metres in a 100-metre dash, then who out of Akshay and Chinmay will
win a race of one and half miles, and what will the final lead given by the winner to the
loser be (in terms of miles)? (One mile is 1600 metres).
1 1 1 1
1) Akshay, 2) Chinmay, 3) Akshay, 4) Chinmay,
12 32 24 16
(Past CAT question)
227
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
21. If Raghu and Ram are running along a circular path after starting from the same point and
running in the same direction with speeds 9 m/s and 11 m/s respectively, how many times
will Ram overtake Raghu before they meet at the starting point for the first time?
1) 1
2) 2
3) 9
4) Depends on the circumference of the circular track
22. In a 100 metres walking race, Abbas gives Mustaan a headstart of 4 metres and beats him
by 19 seconds. If Abbas gives Mustaan a headstart of 30 seconds, by how much will the
winner win over the loser, if it is known that the ratio of Abbas’ speed to that of Mustaan
is 6 : 5?
1) Abbas will win by 5 seconds. 2) Mustaan will win by 5 seconds.
3) Abbas will win by 10 seconds. 4) Mustaan will win by 10 seconds.
23. Three participants—A, B and C—ran a race of total length 192 m. A won the race ahead of
B by 48 m and ahead of C by 72 m. By what distance (in metres) did B win the race ahead
of C?
1) 30 2) 32 3) 36 4) 40
24. Karan and Arjun are running a race between points A and B. If both start from point A,
Karan beats Arjun by 20 m. If Karan starts from 10 m behind A and Arjun starts from point
A, Karan beats Arjun by 12 m. What is the distance between points A and B (in metres)?
228
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Teaser
Tony plans to go on a tour of South India in his car. All the 4 tyres in his car have been recently
replaced and in addition he has a new spare tyre. From experience he knows that a tyre wears
out after 2500 km of travel. However, the route he plans to take is 3000 km long. Will he be
able to manage the tour without needing to buy fresh tyres?
229
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
A jogging track in a park is in the shape of a regular hexagon inscribed in an equilateral triangle
as shown in the adjoining figure. Two people M and N start jogging
along this track along different paths. The speeds of M and N are in
the ratio 1 : 2 and M can complete the distance PR in 9 minutes.
3. If both of them start together at Y as in the first question, by what percent will M have to
change his speed so that both of them complete one round and returns to Y at the same
time?
4. Passenger trains ply between Kochi and Kollam throughout the day at 30 minutes interval. The
first train of the day starts at 7 AM while the last train starts at 11.30 PM from both Kochi
and Kollam. The distance between the two cities can be covered in four hours. Muralidharan
boarded a train at Kochi at 9 AM. How many trains travelling in the opposite direction will
he see (including the trains at either station) till he reaches Kollam?
5. Two trains A and B start simultaneously at 10 a.m from cities P and Q towards each other
at speeds of 60 and 80 kmph respectively. They meet at point R at 10 pm. After how long
will they reach their respective destinations Q and P?
6. Two people W and X start from two points Y and Z walking towards each other’s starting
points. They meet along the way and then W takes 18 minutes more while X takes 50 min-
utes more to reach their destinations. How much time after starting did they meet? What is
the ratio of their speeds?
7. * At 9 a.m., A starts driving from city P to city Q at a constant speed. At 10 a.m., B starts
driving from city Q to city P, at a different constant speed. The two of them meet along the
way at 10:48 a.m., and eventually reach their destinations simultaneously. At what time did
they reach?
230
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-II 3.10
8.
THEORY
PRACTICE EXERCISE CLASS EXERCISE
* A robotics design competition requires remote-controlled cars to move along the paths in
the adjacent figure (where ABCD is a rectangle circumscribing two circles touching external-
ly). One car moves along the circular path JEKHGFKIJ while a second moves along the path
JAEFBGCHIDJ. If both start from J at the same time, and also finish simultaneously, what
is the ratio of their speeds?
9. At 9:00 AM, Ajay and Vijay started walking together at the same speed for Udaipur railway
station in order to reach just in time to catch a train there at 11:00 AM. When they were
exactly midway, Vijay realized that he forgot his ticket. Therefore he immediately rushed back
home in a horse-cart, while Ajay continued walking towards the railway station. Vijay collected
his ticket from home and took the same horse-cart to the railway station and reached the
railway station just in time to catch the train. What is the ratio of the speeds of the horse
cart to the walking speed of Ajay?
10. Donald was supposed to reach Washington railway station in a train from New York at 10
AM and his brother, Mike was suppose to leave home at 8 AM in a car to reach Washington
railway station exactly at 10 AM to receive Donald. However, Donald got ticket on an earlier
train and reached Washington at 7 AM. On reaching Washington, Donald immediately called
Mike and Mike left home right away. In the meantime, Donald took a horse-cart and started
travelling towards home. Mike met Donald and both Mike and Donald drove back home. If
they reached home at 10.30 AM, what is the ratio of the distance travelled by Donald in a
horse cart to the distance travelled by him in a car?
11. Mr. Slow drives at a speed of 25 kmph while Mr. Fast drives at a speed of 50 kmph. Both
drivers drove from point P to point Q and then immediately return to point P. Mr. Slow started
at 8 AM while Mr. Fast started at 10 AM. Mr. Fast reached point Q and on his way back to
point P, he met Mr. Slow, who was still on his way to point Q at 12:40 PM. Calculate the
distance between points P and Q.
12. Two friends named Ajay and Vijay simultaneously start swimming from points A and B re-
spectively towards points B and A respectively with constant speed. On reaching points B
and A respectively, they immediately turn back and run towards their starting points with
same speed. They continue swimming this way. On their way, they meet each other at a
point 500 m away from A during their first meeting and at a point 300 m from B in their
second meeting.
Calculate:
1. The distance of their third meeting point from point A.
2. The distance of their third meeting point from point B.
231
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
13. Two cats named Amy and Pamy simultaneously start running in opposite directions from
vertex A of a running track ABC in the shape of an equilateral triangle of side 500 m. They
keep running indefinitely. If their first meeting point is along side BC at a distance 200 m
from vertex B, what would be the location of their 20th meeting?
1] Between point A and point B 2] Point B
3] Between point B and point C 4] Between point C and point A
14. Mr. One and Mr. Two simultaneously started driving towards each other at the speed of 25
kmph from two points separated by 1000 km. At the same time, Mr. Three, who was exactly
at the midpoint of the segment joining Mr. One and Mr. Two, started driving towards Mr. One
at 100 kmph. On meeting Mr. One, Mr. Three immediately reversed his direction and drove
towards Mr. Two at the same speed of 100 kmph. On meeting Mr. Two, Mr. Three immediately
reversed his direction and drove towards Mr. One at the same speed. Mr. Three continued
driving this way at the same speed till Mr. One and Mr. Two met. Calculate:
1. Total distance driven by Mr. Three
2. Distance driven by Mr. Three in the direction towards Mr. One
3. Distance driven by Mr. Three in the direction towards Mr. Two
15. Everyday I go for a morning walk to a hill at a distance of 3 km from my home. Today, my
dog, Rocky also accompanied me. He left home with me and ran to the hill at a speed three
times that of my walking speed. On reaching the hill, he immediately reversed his direction
and ran towards me at the same speed. On meeting me, he again ran towards the hill at
the same speed. This process continued till I reached the hill.
Calculate:
1. The total distance run by Rocky
2. The distance run by Rocky towards the hill
3. The distance run by Rocky towards me
16. Two trains, named A and B are at a distance of 200 km and they simultaneously start to-
wards each other at equal speed of 100 km. A bird, who is perched on the engine of train
A starts flying towards train B at a speed 200 kmph. The bird keeps flying between the two
trains at the same speed without stopping till two trains meet.
Calculate:
1. Total distance travelled by the bird
2. The distance travelled by the bird in the direction from train A to train B
3. Total distance travelled by the bird in the direction from train B to train A
17. Two local trains simultaneously start from Bandra and Andheri towards each other with speeds
30 km/hr and 42 km/hr respectively. A crow is perched on the engine of the train starting
from Bandra while a parrot is perched on the engine of the train starting from Andheri. Both
crow and the parrot start flying towards each other with speeds 48 km/hr and 60 km/hr
respectively from the moment the two trains start. The crow and the parrot meet each oth-
er and then immediately return to the trains that they started from. They again fly towards
each other and on meeting, immediately fly back towards the train they started from. This
process continues till the two trains meet. If the distance between Bandra and Andheri is
24 km, what is the total distance flown by the crow?
1] 20 km 2] 16 km 3] 32 km 4] 40 km
232
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-II 3.10
18. Rajesh started walking towards his home from a point 6 km away. At the same instant, his dog
THEORY
started running from home towards him at twice the speed of Rajesh. The dog met Rajesh,
then immediately reversed his direction and ran towards the home at the same speed. The
dog continued running between home and Rajesh till the time Rajesh reached home.
19. Tushar takes 80 seconds to climb down an escalator that is moving downwards but he takes
100 seconds to climb down an escalator that is moving upwards. If the escalator is stationary,
how many seconds would he take to climb down the escalator?
20. Tushar is climbing down an escalator that is moving downwards from the first floor to the
ground floor. He takes 100 seconds to reach the ground floor and traverses 60 steps if he
decides to walk. On the other hand, he takes 60 seconds and traverses 90 steps if he de-
cides to run. How many steps are there on the escalator?
21. Tushar and Vishal are climbing on an escalator that is moving up. Tushar takes 25 seconds
while Vishal takes 20 seconds to reach the top because Vishal is faster than Tushar. Vishal
takes 2 steps per second, while Tushar takes 1 step per second. What is the total number
of steps on the escalator?
22. Tushar is climbing up an escalator that is going up, while Vishal is climbing down the same
escalator. For every one step Tushar takes, Vishal takes two steps. Both start together and
reach their destinations together. If Tushar walks 48 steps up the escalator, what is the total
number of steps of the escalator?
23. Raghav is walking at a constant speed beside a busy highway that connects Ahmedabad and
Vadodara. Buses ply between the two cities at equal intervals in both directions. He encoun-
ters a bus going from Ahmedabad to Vadodara after every 12 minutes and a bus going from
Vadodara to Ahmedabad after every 10 minutes. What is the time interval between the two
consecutive buses going from Ahmedabad to Vadodara if it is known that the buses in both
directions run at the same speed?
233
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
Challengers
There is a railway line in East-West direction. Three railway stations—Rampur, Laxmanpur and
Sitapur are on the railway line, with Rampur being towards West and Sitapur being towards East
and Laxmanpur between Rampur and Sitapur. Ajay is standing exactly to the south of Laxmanpur
railway station at a distance of 2.4 km. He is 3 km away from Rampur station and 4 km away
from Sitapur station. A train travelling eastward is approaching Rampur station. The speed of train
and Ajay are such that if Ajay had walked at his normal speed, he would have just caught the train
either at Rampur or Sitapur. However Ajay decides to walk up north towards Laxmanpur station
and board the train there. On reaching Laxmanpur station, he realizes that the train does not halt
there. Therefore he decides to walk towards Sitapur station. As Ajay is on his way to Sitapur, he
receives a call from his brother saying that the train has just left Rampur and he should better
run lest he would miss the train.
(Note: Halting time of the train at Rampur, time spent by Ajay at Laxmanpur and time spent for
the phone call may be considered negligible)
1. How much faster should Ajay run as a percentage of his normal walking speed in order to
just catch train at Sitapur?
1) He should run 200% faster as compared to his normal walking speed
2) He should run 260% faster as compared to his normal walking speed
3) He should run 160% faster as compared to his normal walking speed
4) Even if he walks at his normal walking speed, he would be catch the train
2. If Ajay continues to walk from Laxmanpur to Sitapur at his normal walking speed, where
would he be when the train reaches Sitapur?
1) 1.2 km short of Sitapur 2) 1.6 km short of Sitapur
3) 1.8 km short of Sitapur 4) At Sitapur station
3. How much faster does the train run as compared to Ajay’s normal walking speed?
1) 500% faster 2) 250% faster
3) 300% faster 4) 400% faster
4. An escalator in a mall has 30 steps. Mithun steps on it and climbs along with it and climbs
10 steps by the time he reaches the top. Rajni climbs at twice the speed Mithun does. How
many steps will he need to reach the top?
1) 12 2) 15 3) 18 4) 20
5. Shanti’s school normally finishes at 4 pm. Her mom drives from home to pick her up, reach-
ing the school exactly at 4 pm. One day, a half-holiday is announced and the school finishes
for the day at 1 pm. Rather than sitting and waiting, Shanti decides to start walking towards
home. Her mother meets her along the way and as a result they reach home an hour earlier
than normal. What is the ratio of Shanti’s walking speed to her mother’s driving speed?
1) 1 : 4 2) 1 : 2 3) 1 : 5 4) 1 : 8
234
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-II 3.10
PRACTICE EXERCISE
DIRECTIONS for questions 1 and 2: Answer the questions on the basis of the information
given below.
Cities A and B are in different time zones. A is located 3000 km east of B. The table below
describes the schedule of an airline operating non-stop flights between A and B. All the times
indicated are local and on the same day.
Departure Arrival
City Time City Time
B 8:00 AM A 3:00 PM
A 4:00 PM B 8:00 PM
Assume that planes cruise at the same speed in both directions. However, the effective speed is
influenced by a steady wind blowing from east to west at 50 km per hour.
1. What is the time difference between A and B?
1) 2 hours and 30 minutes 2) 1 hour 3) 1 hour and 30 minutes
4) 2 hours 5) Cannot be determined
(Past CAT question)
3. A jogging park has two identical circular tracks touching each other and a rectangular track
enclosing the two circles. The edges of the rectangles are tangential to the circles. Two
friends, A and B, start jogging simultaneously from the point where one of the circular tracks
touches the smaller side of the rectangular track. A jogs along the rectangular track, while B
jogs along the two circular tracks in a figure of eight. Approximately, how much faster than
A does B have to run, so that they take the same time to return to their starting point?
1) 3.88% 2) 4.22% 3) 4.44% 4) 4.72%
(Past CAT question)
4. On a rectangular track, points A and B are diagonally opposite. If X starts running from point
A towards point B along rectangular track, he takes 12 minutes more than he would have
taken had he run along the straight path. This difference is 4 minutes for Y. Z travels half
the distance with X’s speed and remaining half with Y’s speed taking 10 minutes to travel
9 km. Find the speed of Y.
1) 10 m/s 2) 15 m/s 3) 12 m/s
4) 9 m/s 5) None of these
235
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
DIRECTIONS for questions 5 and 6: Refer to the data below and answer the questions that
follow.
Kedar and Vishnu are moving along a rectangular track ABCD. Kedar starts cycling at 6 kmph from
point A at 8:00 am on the route A-D-C-B-A. Vishnu starts walking at 8:50 am from point C at the
speed of 1 kmph and takes the route C-B-A-D-C.
AB = 6 km and BC = 4 km.
6. How far away from each other are the two at 10:50 am?
1) 5 km 2) 4 km 3) 10 km 4) 17 km 5) 6 km
DIRECTIONS for questions 7 and 8: Refer to the data below and answer the questions that follow.
K is travelling from A to E through four different roads of equal length i.e., AB, BC, CD and DE.
He covers this distance in 10 minutes at a speed of 1.2 kmph.
8. If there is a direct road joining A and D, find the approximate time taken by K to reach E,
if he travels directly via D. (use data from the previous question)
1) 5 minutes 2) 7 minutes 3) 8 minutes
4) 9 minutes 5) Cannot be determined
9. A wolf spots a rabbit 100 m away and starts chasing it. The rabbit realizes this after two
minutes and starts running away from the wolf towards a burrow which is 40 m from where
the rabbit is right now. The rabbit covers 1 m in 3 leaps whereas the wolf covers 3 m in 4
leaps. At what speed should the rabbit run so that it just manages to reach the burrow if the
wolf is running at 20 m per minute? (The wolf, rabbit and burrow are in a straight line.)
180
1) 24 leaps/min 2) 18 leaps/min 3) 16 leaps/min 4) leaps/min
11
236
Chapter QA
TSD APPLICATIONS-II 3.10
10. Two cats named Amy and Pamy are standing at points A and B respectively. They simultane-
11. A and B are standing at the opposite ends of a 200-metre long stretch of road. They start
driving towards each other. The one who reaches the half way first wins the race, however
they continue driving towards the opposite point even after the race is over. It is known the
A won 1.33 seconds before meeting B along the way and B takes 6.66 seconds more to
travel the entire distance than A. What is the speed of A?
1) 10 m/s 2) 12 m/s 3) 15 m/s 4) 18 m/s
12. Basanti is walking beside a railway track between Pune and Baramati at a constant speed
towards Baramati. Local trains ply between the two cities at equal intervals in both direc-
tions. She encounters a train going from Pune to Baramati after every 8 minutes and a train
going from Baramati to Pune after every 6 minutes. What is the time interval between the
two consecutive trains going from Pune to Baramati?
1) 7 minutes
6
2) 6 minutes
7
1
3) 6 minutes
2
4) More information is needed to answer this question
13. Karan and Arjun are standing at points A and B respectively, separated by 500 meters. Karan
starts running towards Arjun while Arjun starts running away from Karan, both along the same
line. Since Karan runs faster than Arjun, Karan catches up with Arjun at a point beyond B. On
meeting Arjun, Karan immediately reverses his direction and starts running towards point B
and then continues towards point A. If Arjun has run 1200 meters by the time Karan reaches
point A, how much distance has Karan run (in meters)?
14. Gaurav starts running along a straight line at uniform speed from point A to point B, which
is located at a distance of 3000 m from point A. At the same instant, his pet dog starts
running from point B to point A at a speed twice that of Gaurav. After the dog meets Gaurav
at a point between A and B, the dog reverses his direction and starts running towards point
B. On reaching point B, the dog again reverses his direction and meets Gaurav. On meeting
Gaurav, the dog again reverses his direction and starts running towards point B. This process
continues till Gaurav reaches point B. What is the distance run by the dog in the direction
opposite to Gaurav (in meters)?
237
CATapult
ARITHMETIC
15. Every morning, Rajesh goes for morning walk from his house to a temple located at a dis-
tance of 6 km from his house at a uniform speed of 6 km/hr. Today his pet dog, who was
exactly midway on the way to temple started running towards the temple the same instant
when Rajesh started from his house. The dog reached the temple, immediately turned back
and started running towards Rajesh (who was on his way to temple). On meeting Rajesh,
his dog again reversed his direction and started running towards the temple. This process
continued till Rajesh reached the temple. What was the distance run by the dog against the
direction of Rajesh (i.e. in the direction from the temple to the house) if the speed of the
dog was 11 km/hr?
1) 7 km 2) 4 km 3) 11 km 4) 8 km
16. There is an escalator connecting the foot of a hill and the hilltop that goes up from the foot
to the top. While going up, Sachin took the escalator and reached the top in 20 seconds
after taking 120 steps. While returning, he took the same escalator but walked down on the
escalator that is moving up. He reached the foot of the hill in 40 seconds after having taken
240 steps. If the escalator is stationary, how many steps would he have to take to climb
from the foot to the top?
1) 200 2) 180 3) 160 4) 144
17. Rahim plans to drive from city A to station C, at the speed of 70 km per hour, to catch a
train arriving there from B. He must reach C at least 15 minutes before the arrival of the
train. The train leaves B, located 500 km south of A, at 8:00 am and travels at a speed of
50 km per hour. It is known that C is located between west and northwest of B, with BC at
60° to AB. Also, C is located between south and southwest of A with AC at 30° to AB. The
latest time by which Rahim must leave A and still catch the train is closest to
1) 6:15 am 2) 6:30 am 3) 6:45 am 4) 7:00 am 5) 7:15 am
(Past CAT question)
18. There is a race track ABCDEFGH in the shape of a regular octagon. Two runners start running
from point A along the race track in opposite directions at speeds which are in the ratio 9
: 7. While running along the track, they meet each other multiple times. At which of the
following meetings will the two be the farthest from point A?
1) 12th 2) 15th 3) 20th 4) 24th
19. There is a ground ABC in the shape of an equilateral triangle with A, B and C as its verti-
ces. Amy, a cat, starts running from vertex A in the direction towards C along side AC. At
the same instant, Pamy, another cat, starts running from vertex C in the direction towards
A along side CA. The two cats meet for the first time after 12 seconds. After meeting, they
continue running in their respective directions along the sides of the triangle. After how many
seconds will they meet for the third time?
20. Rohit climbs up an escalator which is going up. If he climbs 35 steps, he will reach the top
in 28 seconds. If he climbs 44 steps, he will be able to reach the top in only 16 seconds.
How many steps are visible on a stationary escalator?
238
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Trigonometry is the study of the relationship between the sides and angles of a right-angled triangle.
1 degree = 1o = 60 minutes
°
One radian = 1c = b
180 l
and 1o = b l
r c
r 180
r
Radian Measure = × Degree Measure
180°
180°
Degree Measure = × Radian Measure
r
Degree 30° 45° 60° 90° 180° 270° 360°
Radian r r r r 3r 2
6 4 3 2 2
In a right angled triangle for a given acute angle, BAC there are six possible ratios of sides.
The values of all these ratios are constant. These ratios are called trigonometric ratios.
Opposite side BC
Sine i.e., sin = =
Hypotenuse AC
Adjacent side AB
Cosine i.e., cos = =
Hypotenuse AC
Opposite side BC
Tangent i.e. tan = =
Adjacent side AB
Hypotenuse AC
Cosecant i.e., cosec = =
Opposite side BC
Hypotenuse AC
Secant i.e., sec = =
Adjacent side AB
Adjacent side AB
Cotangent i.e., cot = =
Opposite side BC
239
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Example
sin25
(i) Find the value of .
cos65
sin25 cos65
sin 25 = cos (90 – 25) = cos 65; = = 1
cos65 cos65
Trigonometrical Identities
BC AC
1. sin = , cosec =
AC BC
sin × cosec = 1
2. cos × sec = 1
3. tan × cot = 1
Note:
cosecant, secant and cotangent ratios are the reciprocal of sine, cosine and tangent ratios
respectively.
240
Chapter QA
TRIGONOMETRY 3.11
sini
4. tan =
THEORY
cosi
cosi
5. cot =
sini
7. sec2 = 1 + tan2
8. cosec2 = 1 + cot2
9. sin(–) = –sin
241
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Students All
Take Coffee
Note:
The sine, cosine and tangent ratios of 0°, 30°, 45°, 60° and 90° are most important and need
to be learned by heart.
0 1 2 3 4
The values of sine ratios are the square root of the fraction , , , and .
4 4 4 4 4
The values of cosine ratio are written in the reverse order of sine ratios and the values of
tangent ratios are obtained by dividing the respective sine ratio by the cosine ratio.
242
Chapter QA
TRIGONOMETRY 3.11
Example
THEORY
Find the value of cos 30 . cos 60 + sin 30 . sin 60
cos 30 . cos 60 + sin 30 . sin 60
1
3. Area of a quadrilateral = × product of diagonals × sine of angle between them.
2
4. In a ABC, where a, b and c are the lengths of the opposite sides of BAC, ABC
and ACB.
a b c
= =
sinA sinB sinC
This is called the sine rule.
5. In ABC,
a2 = b2 + c2 – 2bc cos A
b2 = c2 + a2 – 2ca cos B
c2 = a2 + b2 – 2ab cos C.
This is called cosine rule.
In case of a right angled triangle, if C = 90°
c2 = a2 + b2 – 2ab cos90°
c2 = a2 + b2 [Pythagoras theorem]
Example
243
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Note:
Numerically angle of elevation is equal to the angle of depression.
The angle of elevation and angle of depression are measured with the horizontal.
Example
A boy is standing on the road at a distance of 50m from the bottom of a tower, and his angle of
elevation of the tower is 30°. Find the height of the tower.
Let AB be the height of the tower and let the boy be standing at position C.
Now, AB = height of the tower and BC = 50m
In ABC, C = 30°
AB
tan 30° =
BC
1 AB
=
3 50
50
AB = m
3
244
Chapter QA
TRIGONOMETRY 3.11
THEORY
Some of these formulae are used in management entrance exams like XAT, IIFT etc.
tanA + tanB
5. tan (A + B) =
1 – tanA tanB
tanA – tanB
6. tan (A – B) =
1 + tanA tanB
7. sin2x = 2sinx.cosx
Concept Builder 1
Answer Key
2 2
6. 4 3 5. a) 60° b) 60 3 4.
3 –1
2 3 3
, b) tan = 3. a) cos = 2. 45° 1.
1 2 r
245
CATapult
GEOMETRY
SOLVED EXAMPLES
Q : In the figure, EF = 100 cm, mHEF = 30° and mHFG = 60°. Find HG.
A : mHFE = 180 – 60 = 120°.
mFHE = 30° FH = EF = 100 cm …[Isosceles tri-
angle]
HFG is a 30° – 60° – 90° triangle
3 3
HG = side opp. 60° = × FH = × 100 = 50 3
2 2
cm.
Q : From the top of a cliff the angle of depression of a point on the ground 150 feet away from
the bottom of the cliff is 30°. Find the height of the cliff.
A : Let CA be the cliff.
CA
tan 30 =
AP
1 CA 150
= ; CA = = 50 3 feet
3 150 3
HL 100 3
A : tan 60 = ; 3 =
LR LR
LR = 100
LR = HC = 100 m
HCT is a 45° - 45° - 90° triangle. HC = CT =
100 m
TR = 100 3 – 100 = 100(1.732 – 1) = 73.2 m
246
Chapter QA
TRIGONOMETRY 3.11
CLASS EXERCISE
Teaser
How many equilateral triangles having length of side equal to one unit can be formed by using 6
matchsticks of length one unit each?
247
CATapult
GEOMETRY
Trigonometry
Opposite b Hypotenuse a
sin = = , cosec = =
Hypotenuse a Opposite b
Adjacent c Hypotenuse a
cos = = , sec = =
Hypotenuse a Adjacent c
Opposite b Adjacent c
tan = = , cot θ = =
Adjacent c Opposite b
Some useful rules: • sin2 + cos2 = 1 • sin = cos (90 – ) • sin (2) = 2 sin cos
248
Chapter QA
TRIGONOMETRY 3.11
THEORY
sin =
cos =
sin =
cos =
tan =
cosec =
sec =
cot =
cosec =
sec =
cot =
2. *Consider a right angled triangle with sides 9 cm, 40 cm and 41 cm. Calculate—
a) sin of the angle opposite to side of length 9 cm
b) cos of the angle opposite to side of length 40 cm
c) tan of the angle opposite to side of length 9 cm.
30 45 60
Sin
Cos
Tan
249
CATapult
GEOMETRY
4. In triangle BAC, BD is an altitude on side AC, which meets side AC in D such that A-D-C.
Suppose side AB = 6, side BC = 10 and angle C = 30 degrees. Calculate lengths of AD, DC
and BD.
sin1.sin2.sin3.............sin89
5. Calculate the value of
cos1.cos2.cos3...........cos89
1
6. If each of a, b and c is a positive acute angle such that sin (a + b – c) = , cosec (b +
2
2 1
c – a) = and tan (c + a – b) = , what are the values of a, b and c?
3 3
1) 37.5, 52.5, 45 2) 37,53,4 3) 45,37.5,52.5 4) 34.5,55.5,45
250
Chapter QA
TRIGONOMETRY 3.11
8. Given that 2 sin x cos x = sin 2x and 1 – 2 sin2x = cos 2x, which for the following is always
THEORY
true about f(x) = sin2x tan x – cos2x cotx, for 45 < x < 90 ?
1) f(x) is always positive
2) f(x) is always negative
9. If x = sin215° + sin230° + sin245° + sin260°+ sin275°+ sin290°, what can be said about x?
1) 1 < x < 2 2) 2 < x < 3 3) 3 < x < 4 4) 4 < x < 5
10. Find the approximate value of (sin 34° + cos 56°)(sin 56° – cos 34°)
11. *If sin (3x) = cos (7x), where x is an angle between 0° and 90°, what will be the value of
tan (5x)?
3. Suppose a regular polygon of n sides is divided into n congruent triangles by joining the
2
nr
vertices of the polygon with the center of the polygon, area of the polygon: sinθ,
2
360
where r is radius of the circumcircle and =
n
12. Suppose in triangle ABC, side AB = 20 cm and side BC = 10 cm. If angle B = 30°, what is
area of triangle ABC?
15. *Calculate area of a regular polygon with 20 sides inscribed in a circle of radius 10 cm.,
given that sin18 = 0.3090
251
CATapult
GEOMETRY
17. Sagar is standing in front of a building at a distance of 400 feet. The angle of elevation for
the top of the building is 30°. There is one electric pole between Sagar and the building.
Sagar can see the top of the building just beyond the top of the pole. If Sagar is standing
at a distance of 20 feet from the pole, what is the height of the pole?
18. There are two buildings, one on each bank of a river, opposite each other. From the top of
one building, which is 60 m high, the angles of depression of the top and the foot of the
other buildings are 30 and 60 respectively. What is the height of the other building?
1) 30 m 2) 18 m 3) 40 m 4) 20 m
19. A car is being driven, in a straight line and at a uniform speed towards the base of a vertical
tower. The top of the tower is observed from the car and in the process, it takes 10 minutes
for the angle of elevation to change from 45 to 60 degrees. After how much more time(in
minutes) will this car reach the base of the tower?
1) 5 ^ 3 + 1 h 2) 6 ^ 3 + 2h 3) 7 ^ 3 – 1 h 4) 8 ^ 3 – 2 h
20. Raju is a naughty boy. He climbs a tree of height 50 m and reaches the top. There is a pillar
in front of the tree. The angle of depression for the top of the pillar is 30 degrees. Raju can
also see that just beyond the top of the pillar, a dog is sleeping on the ground at a distance
of 10√3 m from the bottom of the pillar and 50√3 m from the bottom of the tree. An eagle
is flying exactly above the pillar such that Raju’s angle of elevation for the eagle from the
top of the tree is 60 degrees. What is the distance between the eagle and the top of the
pillar?
1) 120 meters 2) 120 3 meters 3) 160 meters 4) 130 meters
21. The angles of depression from a 150m tower to the top and bottom of a chimney are 30°
and 60° respectively. Find the height of the chimney.
1) 50√3 m 2) 75 m 3) 75 3 m 4) 100 m
22. *A soldier standing at the top of a tower of height 10 sees three enemies approaching along
a straight road. The angles of depression made by the three are 35°, 45° and 55°, while
their distances from the foot of the tower are a, b and c respectively. What is the value of
a × b × c?
252
Chapter QA
TRIGONOMETRY 3.11
Challengers:
THEORY
For all real numbers x, except x = 0 and x = 1, function F is defined by F b l = 1 . If
x
1.
x – 1 x
0 < < 90, what is the value of F(cosec2)?
3. A tower is at corner B of a rectangular field ABCD. From corner D, the top E of the tower
is at an angle of elevation of 30°, while from the corner C, it is at an angle of elevation of
45°.
Find the ratio of the lengths of the sides of the field.
1) 3 : 1 2) 2 : 1 3) 2 : 1 4) 1 : 1
253
CATapult
GEOMETRY
PRACTICE EXERCISE
DIRECTIONS for questions 1 to 6: Choose the correct alternative.
2. If & are supplementary angles then tan2 – sec2 will be equal to:
1) sin2 + cos2 2) sin2 – cos2
3) cos2 + sin2 4) –sin2 – cos2
4. If cosec - sin = a, sec – cos = b & tan + cot = c then which of the following is not
true?
1) abc = 1
2) (a2b) + (ab2) = 1
3) ab = sin cos
1 + sini + cosi
4) – (sin + cos) = a + b + c
ab
5. If cosec – sin = p and sec – cos = q then which of the following is true?
1) p2q2 + pq2 = 1 2) pq = 1
2 2/3 2 2/3
3) (p q) + (pq ) = 1 4) p/q = 1
1) 2 3 2) 3 3 3) 3 2 4) 2 5
254
Chapter QA
TRIGONOMETRY 3.11
10. A dog moving towards a wall, observes a lizard moving up a wall. At the particular instant
the angle of elevation is 30°. When the lizard reaches the top of the wall, the dog is 15
metres away from the wall.
What is the distance travelled by the dog in this period if the lizard has travelled 5 3 m
(during the same period) and the angle of elevation of the dog’s eye with the lizard becomes
60o?
1) 16.5 m 2) 15 m 3) 16.5 3 m 4) 15 3 m
11. A crow, sitting on the ground, sees the top of a building at an angle of elevation of 30°
and starts flying towards it along a straight line. At the same time, a pigeon, who is sitting
at the bottom of the building, flies straight up towards the top of the building. They both
fly at the same speed. The pigeon reaches 20 seconds earlier than the crow. If they were
moving along the ground from their initial positions towards each other at the same speed,
after how much time (in seconds) will they meet?
1) 5 2) 5 3 3) 10 4) 10 3
12. A tower of height 100 m is installed at a point in an open ground. A cat named Amy is standing
at a point from where the angle of elevation of the top of the tower is 30°. Another cat named
Pamy is standing at a point on the line joining Amy’s position and the foot of the tower (on the
same side as Amy) such that the angle of elevation of the top of the tower from Pamy’s posi-
tion is 60°. If Amy and Pamy simultaneously start running towards each other, they meet at a
point from where the angle of elevation of the top of the tower is 45°. If Amy and Pamy both
simultaneously start running towards the tower from their original positions, how far from the
foot of the tower would Amy be when Pamy reaches the foot of the tower (in m)?
1) 100( 2 – 1) 2) 100 ( 3 + 1) 3) 100 4) 100 ( 3 – 1)
255
CATapult
GEOMETRY
13. There are two towers AB and CD (A and C being their tops and B and D being their feet).
The angle of elevation of C from B is 30° and the angle of elevation of A from D is 60°.
An eagle and a kite start flying at the same moment from the tops of towers AB and CD
respectively towards the foot of the other tower along a straight line and at uniform speeds.
If they meet at one point along their flight, find the ratio of their speeds.
1) 3 : 1 2) 3 3 : 2 3) 3 : 1 4) 3 3 : 1
14. On a regular octagon ABCDEFGH, two towers of heights h1 and h2 are set on the points D and
F respectively. The angle of elevation of the top of the tower at F from A is 45° while the angle
of depression of the point A from the top of the tower at D is 30°. Find the ratio h1 : h2.
2 1 3
1) 3 2) 3) 4)
3 3 2
15.
The upper half of a 20 metre high pole got bent away from the sun by 90° at its midpoint
such that the upper half and lower half of the pole are now at right angles to each other, as
shown in the figure. The sunrays fall at an angle of 60° with respect to the horizontal. Find
the distance between the shadows cast by the topmost point of the pole before and after it
got bent.
1) 10 e om 4) 10 ^ 3 – 1 h m
3 –1 10
2) m 3) 10 3 m
3 3
256
Chapter QA
TRIGONOMETRY 3.11
16. The angle of elevation of the top of a building from point A on the ground is 30°. The angle
1) 3 : 1 2) 1 : 3 3) 1 : 2 4) 2 : 1
17. The angle of elevation of the top of a tower from point P on the ground is . The angle of
elevation of a certain point on the tower above the ground from point P is . If the distance
of the point P from the foot of the tower is 15, find the height of the tower. Given: tan =
1
; = 2.
3
1) 11.25 2) 13.75 3) 15 4) 16.25
18. A lizard is lying stationary at point A on the floor. It observes an insect on a vertical wall at
point B which is at an angle of elevation of 30° from A. As soon as the lizard starts moving
along the floor towards the vertical wall in the direction of the insect, the insect starts mov-
ing upwards along the vertical wall. Once the lizard reaches the edge of the wall, it starts
moving upward along the vertical wall towards the insect. The lizard is able to catch the
insect when it reaches point C on the vertical wall, which is at an angle of elevation of 60°
with respect to A. What is the ratio of the speeds of the insect and the lizard?
1 2 1 2
1) 2) 3) 4)
3 1+ 3 3+ 3 3+ 3
19. Buildings A and B are parallel to each other. The height of B is less than that of A. I am
standing in such a way that building B is between building A and me. I am standing at a
distance of 200 3 from building B and can see only 20 floors of building A. After travelling
400
a distance of × 3 m towards the buildings, I am able to see only the top of building
3
A. Building B has 20 floors.
(Height of floors in buildings A and B are the same. Also assume my height to be of negli-
gible value).
What is the distance between the buildings A and B?
257
CATapult
GEOMETRY
20. A person is standing at a distance of 1800 meters facing a giant clock at the top of a tower.
At 5.00 p.m., he can see the tip of the minute hand of the clock at 30 degree elevation from
his eye-level. Immediately, the person starts walking towards the tower. At 5.10 pm., the
person noticed that the tip of the minute hand made an angle of 60 degrees with respect to
his eye-level. Using three dimensional vision, find the speed at which the person is walking.
258