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Bunuel
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Bunuel
Seventeen different points are to be located on the circumference of a circle and each point is to be connected to all other points by line segments. At most, how many of the segments thus formed can be diameters of a circle?

(A) 8
(B) 9
(C) 16
(D) 17
(E) 34


Dear Moderator,

Kindly provide the Official explanation for this one, seems as though the Answer should be A.

Here is a similar sum , using the same logic , accordingly the answer here should be A IMO.

Please kindly explain how the answer is C. Thank you.

https://gmatclub.com/forum/each-of-the- ... 02190.html
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Hey Bunuel please provide an explanation for this. I think the answer should be A
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Hi ! Can you please explain the OA ? GMATinsight
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Hi ! Can you please explain the OA ? GMATinsight

Quote:
Seventeen different points are to be located on the circumference of a circle and each point is to be connected to all other points by line segments. At most, how many of the segments thus formed can be diameters of a circle?

(A) 8
(B) 9
(C) 16
(D) 17
(E) 34

ShankSouljaBoi

CONCEPT: A diameter is a line joining two diametrically opposite points on the circumference. i.e. a Diameter requires joining two points

Since we have 17 points so we need to see how many pairs of points can we make

Total pairs of two points = Greatest integer of (17/2) = [17/2] = 8

i.e. There will be 8 distinct diagonals

But since every point is being joined with every other point here therefore total such lines will be 16 as every diagonal will be drawn two
e.g. We will draw a line originating from point 1 to point 9 and then next attempt will be to draw line originating from point 9 and connecting point 1
i.e. Same diameter drawn twice

Hence, total Such lines which become diameter = 8*2 = 16

Answer: Option C
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Bunuel
Seventeen different points are to be located on the circumference of a circle and each point is to be connected to all other points by line segments. At most, how many of the segments thus formed can be diameters of a circle?

(A) 8
(B) 9
(C) 16
(D) 17
(E) 34


Dear Moderator,

Kindly provide the Official explanation for this one, seems as though the Answer should be A.

Here is a similar sum , using the same logic , accordingly the answer here should be A IMO.

Please kindly explain how the answer is C. Thank you.

https://gmatclub.com/forum/each-of-the- ... 02190.html



stne and Shbm

Please pay attention to the language of question and then see the explanation here.

The question says, each point is to be connected to all other points by line segments and then At most, how many of the segments thus formed can be diameters of a circle

Check the highlighted, Bold and Italic part which states how many such segments will be diameter that is each segment is to be counted separately irrespective of duplication of the same line therefore,
e.g. We will draw a line originating from point 1 to point 9 and then next attempt will be to draw line originating from point 9 and connecting point 1
i.e. Same diameter drawn twice hence 8 diameters will be counted 16 times


CONCEPT: A diameter is a line joining two diametrically opposite points on the circumference. i.e. a Diameter requires joining two points

Since we have 17 points so we need to see how many pairs of points can we make

Total pairs of two points = Greatest integer of (17/2) = [17/2] = 8

i.e. There will be 8 distinct diagonals

But since every point is being joined with every other point here therefore total such lines will be 16 as every diagonal will be drawn two
e.g. We will draw a line originating from point 1 to point 9 and then next attempt will be to draw line originating from point 9 and connecting point 1
i.e. Same diameter drawn twice

Hence, total Such lines which become diameter = 8*2 = 16

Answer: Option C


I hope this helps!!!
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GMATinsight: sir, quoting your line below:

concept: "A diameter is a line joining two diametrically opposite points on the circumference. i.e. a Diameter requires joining two points"

For a diameter to be valid on a circle it has to pass through the center as well as 'd=r*2', by your above statement it seems to give definition of a chord of circle... the word 'center' is missing from your statement.

For the question we can also solve it as below:
First drawing a circle and marking 17 points on opposite sides of the circle circumference, we would be left with only 1 point which won't be having any pair, total set of pairs would be 8 or say 16 segments ' diameter' thus be formed on the circle which are all passing through center of the circle,
Had the question not specified the word " diameter ' "how many of the segments thus formed on the circle using 17 points" in that case answer would have been undefined as the position of 17 points wouldn't have be sure.....
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Archit3110
GMATinsight: sir, quoting your line below:

concept: "A diameter is a line joining two diametrically opposite points on the circumference. i.e. a Diameter requires joining two points"

For a diameter to be valid on a circle it has to pass through the center as well as 'd=r*2', by your above statement it seems to give definition of a chord of circle... the word 'center' is missing from your statement.

For the question we can also solve it as below:
First drawing a circle and marking 17 points on opposite sides of the circle circumference, we would be left with only 1 point which won't be having any pair, total set of pairs would be 8 or say 16 segments ' diameter' thus be formed on the circle which are all passing through center of the circle,
Had the question not specified the word " diameter ' "how many of the segments thus formed on the circle using 17 points" in that case answer would have been undefined as the position of 17 points wouldn't have be sure.....

Archit3110

The highlighted part "Diametrically opposite points", by definition, ensures that the line passes through the centre.

Refer: https://www.mathwords.com/d/diametrically_opposed.htm
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GMATinsight: Okay got it sir.. thanks.
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Bunuel
Seventeen different points are to be located on the circumference of a circle and each point is to be connected to all other points by line segments. At most, how many of the segments thus formed can be diameters of a circle?

(A) 8
(B) 9
(C) 16
(D) 17
(E) 34


I personally think the answer to the question is ambiguous. It can be 8 or 16 depending on how you count line segment. I do not see official GMAT asking a question with ambiguous answers.
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main problem in this question is the use of "a" instead of "the" in the line....."can be diameters of a circle"....using "a" the answer will be 16!......but using "the" answer will be 16.....
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