Asked by aga
If Burt's speed increases, the number of snowmen destroyed does what 1.increases 2.decreases.3 stays the same
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I don’t have the full problem statement, so I need to know the setup to be sure. With the typical assumptions (snowmen are spaced along a route and Burt destroys any he passes), increasing Burt’s speed means he can cover more distance in the same time, so the number destroyed increases — choice 1.
If instead the number destroyed is counted per trip of fixed distance then speed doesn’t change the count (stays the same). If destruction requires a fixed time per snowman (so he can only destroy one at a time), increasing speed might not help and the count could stay the same. Give the full problem text if you want a definitive answer.
If instead the number destroyed is counted per trip of fixed distance then speed doesn’t change the count (stays the same). If destruction requires a fixed time per snowman (so he can only destroy one at a time), increasing speed might not help and the count could stay the same. Give the full problem text if you want a definitive answer.
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