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Statement 1: Lisa spends 2x minutes in each room and Paul spends 3x minutes in each room.
We can deduct that by the time Lisa passes from 3 rooms, Paul can pass through only 2 rooms.
With this information we can identify the room where they will meet - Sufficient

Statement 2: Lisa spends 10 minutes less time in each room than Paul does.
We don't have enough information regarding the amount of time Lisa or Paul spends in each room - Insufficient

Answer A
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Statement 1: Lisa spends 2x minutes in each room and Paul spends 3x minutes in each room.
We can deduct that by the time Lisa passes from 3 rooms, Paul can pass through only 2 rooms.
This way we get a movement pattern, hence we can find the room in which they meet
Sufficient

Statement 2: Lisa spends 10 minutes less time in each room than Paul does.
lets paul takes 200 min, Lisa takes 190 min
or, paul takes 20 min and Lisa takes 10 min.
hence the movement pattern in both cases would be different.
NOT Sufficient

Bunuel
Attachment:
floor.jpg

Tough and Tricky questions: Word Problems.




The figure above represents the floor plan of an art gallery that has a lobby and 18 rooms. If Lisa goes from the lobby into room A at the same time that Paul goes from the lobby into room R, and each goes through all of the rooms in succession, entering by one door and exiting by the other, which room will they be in at the same time ?

(1) Lisa spends 2x minutes in each room and Paul spends 3x minutes in each room.
(2) Lisa spends 10 minutes less time in each room than Paul does.

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Bunuel

The figure above represents the floor plan of an art gallery that has a lobby and 18 rooms. If Lisa goes from the lobby into room A at the same time that Paul goes from the lobby into room R, and each goes through all of the rooms in succession, entering by one door and exiting by the other, which room will they be in at the same time ?

(1) Lisa spends 2x minutes in each room and Paul spends 3x minutes in each room.
(2) Lisa spends 10 minutes less time in each room than Paul does.


Apply Bunuel 's solution from here to see why statement 1 is sufficient on its own:
https://gmatclub.com/forum/two-trains-x-and-y-started-simultaneously-from-opposite-ends-of-a-168061.html#p1337527
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The most important condition to be sure about here is whether there is only one way to walk through all the rooms. And it seems to be the case that not one of the rooms is connected to more than one other room. Therefore we can safely conclude that this art gallery would not have passed the fire precautions.

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Video solution from Quant Reasoning starts at 7:49
Subscribe for more: https://www.youtube.com/QuantReasoning? ... irmation=1
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Lisa and Paul are walking towards each other, shrinking together a total distance of 18 rooms.

The moment they meet they would have spent exactly the same time walking towards each other at their respective speeds.

Since the time is the same, we know that the speed and the distance will vary directly. Therefore: SL/SP= DL/DP (S is the speed and D is the distance; in this case the number of rooms).

Since we know the total distance that is 18 rooms, if we know the ratio of lisa's distance to Paul's distance (DL/DP) or the ratio of Lisa's speed to Paul's speed (SL/SP), we will be able to answer this question.

Statement 1 tells us that 2xDL = 3xDP (time spent on each room multiplied by the number of rooms for Lisa and Paul are equal because they spent the same time moving towards each other when they met).
Hence, DL/DP=3x/2x=3/2.
We can stop here and state that this statement is sufficient without having to make any calculations.
But for the sake of clarity, let's find out where they exactly meet:

DL : DP : Total
3 : 2 : 5
Since the actual total is 18, using the unknown multiplier, we get:
DL : DP : Total
10,8 : 7,2 : 18

They will therefore meet in room K. Statement 1 is sufficient.

An alternative method to solve this is to use algebra by solving the following system of two equations, to find out the values of DL and DP:
2xDL=3xDp ---> 2DL=3DP (dividing by x)
DL+DP=18
After solving, you will get DP=7,2 and DL= 10,8.



Statement 2 tells us that Lisa spends 10 minutes less time in each room than Paul does. That tells us that Lisa is faster than Paul, so we know that they are going to meet somewhere between J and R but we don't know where exactly.
For different values of the time spent in each room by Lisa and Paul, we can get different values for the ratio of their distances, and therefore different answers to where they meet. Hence statement 2 is not sufficient.

Correct answer is A
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There is only one route from room A to room R and vice versa so IMO, the best way to approach this question is to think of it as two buses (or cars), one leaving from city A to city B and the other leaving from city B to city A and find out where they meet in the middle.

We know the total distance between the two. We know that the time taken by both of them is going to be the same.

Hence, to understand how much distance each of them would cover before meeting, we need the ratio of the ditances they covered, which means we need the ratio of their speeds (since they both travel for the same time).

Statement 1 gives that while Statement 2 doesn't. Hence option A.
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Total number of rooms =18

Time spent per room
Lisa = 2x
Paul = 3x

Rooms covered
Lisa =y
Paul=18-y

Same time passed when they meet so it can be equated
2x *y= 3x *(18-y)

X cancelled, single variable equation. Y is solvable

A sufficient


Time spent in each room
Lisa = x
Paul = x-10

Same equation again
Xy= (x-10)*(18-y)

Two variables one equation
Insufficient

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MartyMurray Bunuel GMATNinja KarishmaB , Can you please provide a solution to this question ?
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sayan640
MartyMurray Bunuel GMATNinja KarishmaB , Can you please provide a solution to this question ?






 

It is a relative speed problem in a different context, that is all. You don't need to solve it once you can picture it as a relative speed problem. You would just know that you can solve it using statement 1 alone. 

If I give you the following, will you be able to solve it?

Lisa and Paul start from 2 opposite ends of a path. The length of the path is 18 metres. 
Lisa is covering 1 metre per 2x mins and Paul is covering 1 metre per 3x mins. After how many metres will they meet?


Can you solve it? Sure. Do you need to, no. But if you were required to, this is how you would:

Time taken to meet = \(\frac{18}{Relative Speed} = \frac{18}{(1/2x + 1/3x)} = \frac{18*6x}{5}\)

Distance covered by Lisa in this time =\(\frac{18*6x}{5} * \frac{1}{2x} = 10.8 meters \)
So Lisa has covered 10 complete metres and is now covering the 11th metre when she meets Paul.

or simply use Ratio of their speeds is 3:2 and carry on from there. You can avoid using x completely then.

In our original question, this is exactly the data we have using statement 1 alone. Each metre is just each room.  
She is in the 11th room which is K and hence statement 1 alone is sufficient. 
Statement 2 alone does not give us the ratio of their speeds or time taken, just the difference in the time taken so we cannot solve using this data. 

Answer (A) 

It is similar to other such problems that also use relative speed in different contexts. For example,
Two jars - one full of water with a drain and other empty with a faucet. When will both have the same level of water?
­­­­­­
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I dont really understand what the problem conveys. What does "which room will they be in at the same time" convey? So given the information should I be able to tell that at a particular time they would be in room x for one and room y for another, or should I assume both of them land in the same room in that time frame or what does it actually mean? Considering that I need to predict which room they will be in lets say they take 2 mins and 3 mins respectively and after 3 mins they will be in some rooms. But if they take 4 mins and 6 mins respectively, after the same 3 mins they will be in their original rooms right? I am confused. Kindly help me out.

Edit: I think the answers all seem to indicate them meeting in the same room at some particular time. But "which room will they be in at the same time" could also mean that I am supposed to predict that at some time x that they are always in (a,b) room respectively. Which is why I thought C is right because you would need both the exact values to know where they exactly are at any exact same time.
Bunuel

The figure above represents the floor plan of an art gallery that has a lobby and 18 rooms. If Lisa goes from the lobby into room A at the same time that Paul goes from the lobby into room R, and each goes through all of the rooms in succession, entering by one door and exiting by the other, which room will they be in at the same time ?

(1) Lisa spends 2x minutes in each room and Paul spends 3x minutes in each room.
(2) Lisa spends 10 minutes less time in each room than Paul does.


Attachment:
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