Difference between revisions of "TADM2E 4.46"

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Question: You are given 12 coins. One of them is heavier or lighter than the rest. Identify
 
this coin in just three weighings
 
  
Solution:
 
Number the coins 1 through 12 and divide them coins into 4 sets of 3...
 
 
There are multiple comparison sets possible. This is an acceptable template to find a few of them.
 
(This template is NOT definitive, there are other solutions that don't follow this template)
 
 
Compare  (set 1 & 1st coin from set 4)  against  (set 2 + 2nd coin from set 4)
 
Compare  (set 1 & 2nd coin from set 4)  against  (set 3 + 1st coin from set 4)
 
Compare  (1st coin from each set)      against  (3rd coin from each set)
 
 
A more concise example:
 
 
Compare  1 2 3 10  against  4 5 6 11
 
Compare  1 2 3 11  against  7 8 9 10
 
Compare  1 4 7 10  against  3 6 9 12
 
 
Each weighing can have 3 possible outcomes: Left Heavy, Right Heavy, or Balanced (L,R or B)
 
 
Build a truth table to interpret outcomes...many outcomes are not possible.
 
Note: THE TABLE VALUES ARE DERIVED FROM THE CHOSEN COMPARISON SETS!
 
 
outcome:    fake coin:
 
l l l      1 is heavy
 
r r r      1 is light
 
l l b      2 is heavy
 
r r b      2 is light
 
l l r      3 is heavy
 
r r l      3 is light
 
r b l      4 is heavy
 
l b r      4 is light
 
r b b      5 is heavy
 
l b b      5 is light
 
r b r      6 is heavy
 
l b l      6 is light
 
b r l      7 is heavy
 
b l r      7 is light
 
b r b      8 is heavy
 
b l b      8 is light
 
b r r      9 is heavy
 
b l l      9 is light
 
r l r      10 is heavy
 
l r l      10 is light
 
l r b      11 is heavy
 
r l b      11 is light
 
b b r      12 is heavy
 
b b l      12 is light
 
 
There are multiple comparison set possibilities, each with their own comparison table solution.
 
 
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A simpler solution #2:
 
 
* put 6 coins on each side of the scale, one side will be heavier.
 
* use the heavier side from the first weighing and put 3 coins on each side of the scale.
 
* using the heavier side from the 2nd weighing, pick 2 coins and put 1 on each side of the scale.
 
 
If the scale is balanced then the coin you didn't weigh is the heavier one.  Otherwise, the scale will show which one of the other 2 is the heavy coin.
 
 
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Since we do not know if the faulty coin is heavier or lighter , the soluition #2 is not correct
 
 
The only solution is solution nr 1, for which we can also use a binary tree
 
 
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I found the explanation at mathforum.org/library/drmath/view/55618.html to be helpful. The key is to build a truth table, but how that table was built is a little tricky because you can't just write out all possible combinations of results and use that. I tried writing a truth table and found that I had to swap some values around to make sure that each measurement step had exactly 4 on each side.
 

Revision as of 02:50, 17 July 2020