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Walking the Roads (Posted on 2004-05-01) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Four roads on a plane, each a straight line, are in general position so that no two are parallel and no three pass through the same point. Along each road walks a traveler at a constant speed. Their speeds, however, may not be the same. It's known that two of the travelers have met each of the other three already.

Prove that the other two have also met each other.

The problem can be generalized to an arbitrary number of roads, which makes it even more striking: Assume that two of the travelers met and have each met all the remaining fellows.

Prove that, if this is the case, the remaining ones all have met each other (ie, if two travelers have met everyone, then everyone has met everyone).

See The Solution Submitted by Sam    
Rating: 4.2857 (7 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
Walking the Roads | Comment 5 of 6 |
okay i'm stumped e-mail me the answer...
Q. is ther enough info or has someoen forgoten to tell us soemthing about the path by which the people travel or whether the road forms any type of a loop. ....



  Posted by alex on 2004-05-05 02:58:34
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