We are asked:
Did Carl win the 30-kilometer race?
Meaning: Was Carl’s time less than both Anton’s and Beatrice’s?
We are told:
Anton and Beatrice together took 3 more combined hours than Carl did:
TA + TB = TC +3
We are to determine if TC < TA and TC < TB
Let’s evaluate the statements.
Statement (1):
None of the three ran faster than 6 km/h.
So:
Their minimum possible time for 30 km is 30/6 =5 hours
(since max speed = 6 km/h → minimum time = 5 hours)
So each person took at least 5 hours to finish.
Let’s test values. Suppose Carl ran at 6 km/h:
TC =5 hours
Then
TA + TB =5+3=8 hours
Average = 4 hours per person → But that contradicts the minimum of 5 hours per person.
So Anton and Beatrice must have gone slower than 6 km/h, meaning longer time.
Try:
Carl:
TC =6 hrs
-> TA + TB =9 hrs
-> So one of A or B could’ve run in 4, one in 5. But 4 is not allowed (since 30 ÷ 4 = 7.5 km/h > 6)
-> So you’re forced to pick realistic values satisfying:
TA ≥5,
TB ≥5, and TA + TB = TC +3
You can find multiple such values, but you cannot determine definitively whether Carl’s time is less than both A and B.
Example:
Carl: 6 hours
Anton: 5 hours
Beatrice: 4 hours -> But Not allowed (>6 km/h)
So that combination invalid
Try:
Carl: 6
Anton: 5.5
Beatrice: 3.5 → 3.5 hrs = 8.57 km/h
Eventually you'll find that while certain combinations are invalid, you still can’t guarantee that Carl was faster than both.
Thus, Statement (1) is not sufficient.
Statement (2):
Anton finished before Beatrice
So, TA < TB
Combined with original info:
TA + TB = TC +3
We now know:
TA < TB
So , TB > (TC+ 3)/2
But we still don’t know if
TC < TA and TC < TB
Counterexample:
Suppose Carl took 6 hours
-> A + B = 9 hours
Let A = 4, B = 5 → A < B , but Carl = 6 -> He is not faster than A -> So Carl didn’t win.
Now suppose:
Carl = 5
-> A + B = 8
Let A = 3.9, B = 4.1 -> A < B , but 3.9 hr = ~7.7 km/h but violates rate limit
So again, we don’t get definitive info from this clue.
Thus, Statement (2) is not sufficient.
Combine (1) and (2):
We now know:
Speeds ≤ 6 km/h -> minimum time per runner = 5 hours
TA + TB = TC +3
TA <TB
Let’s test if this gives a definite conclusion.
Try:
Carl = 5 hours -> then A + B = 8 hours
Try A = 3.9, B = 4.1 -> B > A
But A = 3.9 hours → speed = 30 ÷ 3.9 ≈ 7.7 km/h ->But violates (1)
Try A = 5.1, B = 2.9 -> B faster -> invalid
Try A = 4.5, B = 3.5 -> both under 5 -> invalid
Eventually you find that only valid combinations under speed constraints do not guarantee that Carl was faster than both A and B. It’s possible for Carl to be slower than A and faster than B — still satisfying all conditions.
Therefore:
Even together, statements (1) and (2) are NOT sufficient.
Final Answer:(E) Statements (1) and (2) TOGETHER are not sufficient.