June 30th, 2007, 10:42 am
Hi The theorist,Sorry for replying late. I was very busy.The argument of x = 4.6 has been posted by me (Msccube) on Aug 02, 06. I repeated part of my post here.What happens if the runner does not change his course at the first time that the swimmer changes his direction. That is the runner not buying the ziz-zag game. The runner will run nearly 270 degrees depending on the angle of the direction of the swimmer to AB. Let us keep the problem simple. We assume that the swimmer swims at 90 degrees to AB to the first order of approximation.The distance that the swimmer must swim to reach the edge is where x = v/s.The distance that the runner must run to catch the swimmer is Equating the time for the swimmer to travel and the runner to travel, , we getSolving this equation, we get x= 4.6.So if the speed of R is less than x= 4.6 times of the swimmer, R cannot catch S if R does not change course and S continues to swim in this direction.QuoteOriginally posted by: TheTheoristChaser (C) will definitely know that his angular speed is greater than the swimmer's (S) since S is outside the critical circle. A more relevant question that you can ask is 'How can C know that S has crossed the critical circle?'. As long as S is able to maintain C at an angle pi, C will know that S is within the critical circle. Even if S pretends by swimming at a slower speed, he cannot do that forever (else, he is just going to waste his potential). It is in his best interest to exit the true critical circle with an angular separation of pi. So, as soon as the false critical circle is reached, he will increase his speed till his max so that he exits the true critical circle with max separation. Also, this is how C will know S's max speed (although this is not required).I am afraid that it is not right. If S is within the critical circle. S can swim at a speed less than his true critical speed. S can start the ziz-zag strategy any time he likes. Therefore, R (C) cannot know whether S has been swimming at the true critical circle. So R cannot know S's true max speed.QuoteOriginally posted by: TheTheoristYou should be careful when you say shorter distance. As soon as S exits the critical circle, irrespective of S's and C's direction, the angular separation between S and C will reduce from pi, in the direction in which C is running. So, if C continues to run in this same direction, he will have to cover a shorter (angular) distance, x (<pi). So, if he starts running in the opposite direction, he will actually have to cover a greater (angular) distance, 2pi-x (>pi)!! But then, it is the relative angular velocity that will be more (wc+ws) in the reversed C direction than in the original direction (wc-ws). Anyways, I addressed this just to give you the picture.Now, let me assume that C could not infer S's max speed and chooses to change his direction a few minutes after S exits the critical circle. Now, what prevents S from reversing his direction also? In fact, if S reverses now (and C has reversed already), it is even better for S because, C will try to catch S with the (once again) reduced angular velocity (wc-ws) but with a greater distance, 2pi-x (>pi) to cover. This can continue recursively until S reaches the edge.I am sorry that this is wrong again! In this case, you cannot think in term of relative angular separation. I have shown why we need x = 4.6 at least!The answer is on the first part of this post. You also miss the point whether R has enough time to decrease the relative angular separation to zero before S reaches the edge. The logic of my argument on the first part of this post should explain why you are wrong.PM me if you have any question. I do not think that we should repeat the argument again and again on the post.QuoteOriginally posted by: TheTheoristLike I said in my previous post, irrespective of whether R (or C) knows S's max speed (and hence knowing when R crosses the critical circle), R should never change his direction outside the critical circle (can even say inside the critical circle, but that doesn't matter because S will anyways maintain R at pi). If he does change once (thereby deciding to cover >pi distance rather than the original <pi distance, but at greater relative velocity), S will also change once thereby making R cover the greater distance at the same relative angular velocity as before changing direction. This is pure wastage of time for R. If R changes twice, S will change twice..... The more number of times R changes, the better it is for S (who will also change the same number of times).It is wrong again! If the speed of R is less than x= 4.6, and R does not change direction, then after S changes direction and S continues to swim in that new direction, R cannot catch S. The first part of this post has shown the point.Therefore, if R does not know S's max speed, R must gamble!I have no intention to offense any mathematician here. It is nothing wrong to apply new concept on any question. To me, knowledge is knowledge. The division into physics, math, musics, philosophy is only by human beings themselves. Applying different areas of knowledge may lead to new insight and new discovery. Therefore, I cannot see why it is a problem to apply economic concept to a math problem. Decades ago, someone applied principles of musics (violation of spring) to physics and math, and they led us to quantum mechanics.
Last edited by
Msccube on June 29th, 2007, 10:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.