ohanish wrote:
Hello everyone,
Need some help with one question that is not making any sense to me right now.
|x-2|>3
Quantity A
The minimum possible value of |x-3.5|
Quantity B
The minimum possible value of |x-1.5|
We have: |x - 2| > 3
=> x - 2 > 3 OR x - 2 < -3
=> x > 5 OR x < -1
Quantity A: The minimum possible value of |x-3.5|
Ideally, the minimum value of any 'absolute value' term is zero
However, in this case, x cannot have the value 3.5 and hence, the above minimum cannot be zero
We need to find the closest x can be to 3.5, and that value is just exceeding 5 (not -1):
Thus, the minimum value of |x - 3.5| just exceeds |5 - 3.5| i.e.
just more than 1.5Quantity B: The minimum possible value of |x-1.5|
In this case too, x cannot have the value 1.5 and hence, the above minimum cannot be zero
We need to find the closest x can be to 1.5, and that value is just less than -1 (not 5):
Thus, the minimum value of |x - 1.5| just exceeds |-1 - 1.5| i.e.
just more than 2.5Thus, Quantity B is greater
Note: We need to find the minimum value, so plugging in ANY value of x is not going to work!
There is a bit of confusion, however, since we have x > 5 or x < -1. The question would have been much better if it had been: x ≥ 5 or x ≤ -1
In that case, Quantity A would have been 1.5 and Quantity B would have been 2.5 and we could have concluded that Quantity B is greater.
However, ideally speaking, in the present question, we have:
Quantity A is greater than 1.5 while Quantity B is greater than 2.5
Hence, the quantities cannot ideally be compared --- Option D