Transcript
FUHkTs-Ipfg • The SAT Question Everyone Got Wrong
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Kind: captions Language: en in 1982 there was one sat question that every single student got wrong here it is in the figure above the radius of circle a is 1/3 the radius of Circle B starting from the position shown in the figure Circle A rolls around Circle B at the end of how many Revolutions of circle a will the center of the circle first reach its starting point is it a three Hales B B 3 C 6 D 9 Hales or E 9 sat questions are designed to be quick this exam gave students 30 minutes to solve 25 problems so about a minute each so feel free to pause the video here and try to solve it what is your answer I'll tell you right now that option b or three is not correct when I first saw this problem my intuitive answer was B because the circumference of a circle is just 2 pi r and since the radius of Circle B is 3 times the radius of circle a the circumference of circle B must also be three times the circumference of circle a so logically it should take three full rotations of circle a to roll around Circle B So my answer was three this is wrong but so our answers a c d and e the reason no one got question 17 correct is that the test writers themselves got it wrong they also thought the answer was three so the actual correct answer was not listed as an option on the test mistakes like this aren't supposed to happen on the SAT for decades it was the one exam every student had to take to go to college in the US it had a reputation for determining ing people's entire Futures as a newspaper from the time stated if you mess up on your sat tests you can forget it your life as a productive citizen is over hang it up son of 300,000 test takers just three students wrote about the error to the College Board the company that administers the SAT Shivan cartha Bruce to and Doug young rice I did a lot of math problems when I was young for the competitions I probably did thousands of mouth problems I read it and I was amazed how badly it's worded I just put three down I figured that's what they wanted the three students were confident none of the listed answers were correct and their letters showed it as a director at the testing service recalled they didn't say they had come up with possible alternative answers or that maybe we were wrong they said flat out you're wrong and they proved it I discussed it with some other people and said I think there was a mistake and they mostly said no one cares I wrote a letter to the educational testing service it was a little while later they called us and said I was correct here is their argument the simplest version of this problem is with two identical coins these have the exact same circumference so by our initial logic this coin should rotate exactly once as it rolls around the other so let's try it [Music] okay but wait we can see it's already right side up at the halfway point so if we finish rolling it around the other coin it'll have rotated not once but twice even though the coins are the exact same size there are no tricks here you can try it for yourself and I'll do it again slowly it's one [Music] two this is known as the coin rotation Paradox this Paradox also applies to question 17 I've made a two-scale model of the problem one useful tip for standardized tests even though they say their images are not to scale they almost always are so when we roll Circle A around Circle B we can see that it rot R Ates once twice three times and four times in total so the correct answer to this question is actually Four once again the circle rotates one more time than we expected to understand this let's wrap this larger Circle in some [Music] ribbon and I'll make it the same length as the circumference and then I will stick it down to the table as a straight line I'm adding some paper here uh so there's something for this to roll [Music] on and now it rolls one two three times what's happening when we turn this straight path into a circular one is that Circle A is now rolling the length of the circumference and it's going around a circle the shape of the circular path itself makes Circle A do an additional rotation to return to its starting point so this is the general solution to the problem find the ratio between the circumferences of Circle B and circle a and then add one rotation to account for the circular path traveled but there is a way to correctly get three let's count the rotations of circle a from the perspective of Circle B looking out at a we can see Circle A rotates one 2 three times and it doesn't matter which Circle you are looking from to Circle A it also rotates three times to come back to its starting position around Circle B similarly from the perspective of the coins we can see that the outer coin only rotates once as it rolls around the inner coin using the perspective of a circle is just like turning the circle's circumference into a straight line it's only as external observers that we actually see the Outer Circle travel a circular path back to its starting point giving us the one extra rotation but there's even another answer if you look closely at question 17 it asks how how many revolutions Circle A makes as it rolls around Circle B back to its starting point now in astronomy the definition of a revolution is precise it's a complete orbit around another body the Earth revolves around the sun which is different from it rotating about its axis so by the astronomical definition of a revolution circle a only revolves around Circle B once it goes around one time now other definitions of Revolution do include the notion of an object rotating about its own axis so one isn't a definitive answer but the wording of this question is extremely ambiguous if you can justify at least three different solutions after reviewing the letters from the students the College Board publicly admitted their mistake a few weeks later and nullified the question for all test takers they said they were discounting the problem and they were calling us because they were going to tell the news and they thought that that we should be warned that the news might contact us I did a bunch of phone interviews and NBC news they came to my school they said they were they said I was right and they were discounting and so that was great but there's more to the explanation it's easy to get an intuitive reason but it's really hard to formally prove that the answer is for I could give you some proofs if you want well that would be wonderful I think that would be um we'd appreciate that for sure I have a whiteboard because I'm a mathematician so I just happen to have a whiteboard here hold on can you see that yep it turns out that the amount the small circle rotates is always the same as the distance the center travels all right so why is this true suppose you had a camera and the camera was always pointed at the center so in your movie it looks like the center doesn't move in the real world the center is going around the circle let's say it's going at some speed V what's the velocity of this point it's zero and that's because it's rolling without slipping if it had any component in that direction that's what slipping would be I mean this is something I think they should have spelled out in the problem but when you change your frame of reference the relative velocities don't change in the movie The Center always has velocity zero so this point would have to have velocity NE V so that means the speed that this is turning is the same as the speed the center is moving so if they always have the same speed they have to go the same total distance the total distance this turns has to be the same as the total distance the center moves in this problem the center of the small circle goes around a circle of radius 4 so the total distance that the center moves is 8 Pi What's the total amount that the small circle rotates it rotates four times and its circumference is 2 pi it's the same number if it rolls without slipping the total distance the center travels is the same as the total amount of turns and this is always true take a circle rolling without slipping on any surface from a polygon to a blob on the outside or the inside the distance travel by the center of the circle is equal to the amount the circle has rotated so just find this distance and divide it by the circle's circumference to get how many rotations it's made this is an even more General solution than our answer to the coin Paradox where we just took our expected answer which we'll call n and added one and it reveals where this shortcut comes from if a circle is rolling continuously around a shape the Circle Center goes around the outside increasing its distance traveled by exactly one circumference of the circle so the distance traveled by the circle's Center is just the perimeter of the shape plus the circle circle's circumference when we ultimately divide this by the circle circumference to get the total number of rotations we get n + 1 if a circle is rolling continuously within a shape the distance traveled by the Circle Center decreases by one circumference of the circle making the total number of rotations n minus one if the circle is rolling along a flat line the distance traveled by the Circle Center is equal to the length of the line which divided by the circle circumference is just n this General principle extends far beyond a mathematical fun fact in fact it's essential in astronomy for accurate timekeeping when we count 365 days going by in a year 365.24 to be precise we say we're just counting how many rotations the earth makes in one orbit around the Sun but it's not that simple all this counting is done from the perspective of you on Earth to an external Observer they'll see the Earth do one extra rotation to account for for its circular path around the Sun so while we count 365.24 days in a year they count 36.2 4 days in a year this is called a siderial year siderial meaning with respect to the Stars where an external Observer would be but what happens to that one extra day a normal solar day is the time it takes the sun to be directly above you again on Earth but the Earth isn't just rotating it's orbiting the Sun at the same time so in a 24-hour solar day Earth actually has to rotate more than 360° in order to bring the sun directly overhead again but Earth's orbit is negligible to distant stars to see a star directly overhead again Earth just needs to rotate exactly 360°. so while it takes the sun exactly 24 hours to be directly above you again a star at night takes only 23 hours 56 minutes and 4 seconds to be above you again that's a siderial day this explains where the extra day goes in the siderial year if we start a solar day and a siderial day at the same time we'd see them slowly diverge throughout the year after 6 months the siderial day would be 12 hours ahead of the solar Day meaning that noon would be midnight and it would keep moving up until it's finally one full day ahead of the solar day at which point a new year and orbit begins 365.24 days that are each 24 hours long are equal to 366.50 6 minutes and 4 seconds long so it makes no sense to use siderial time on Earth because 6 months down the line day and night would be completely swapped but equally it's useless to use solar time while tracking objects in space because the region you're observing would shift between say 10: p.m. one night and 10 p.m. the next night so instead astronomers use siderial time for their telescopes to ensure that they're looking at the same region of space each night and all geostationary satellites like those used for communication or navigation they use siderial time to keep their orbits locked with the Earth rotation so the coin Paradox actually explains the difference between how we track time on Earth and how we track time in the universe the rescoring of the 1982 sat wasn't all good news with question 17 scrapped students scores were scaled without it moving their final result up or down by 10 points out of 800 now while that doesn't seem like much some universities and Scholar scholarships use strict minimum test score cutoffs and as one admissions expert put it there are instances even if we do not consider them justified in which 10 points can have an impact on a person's educational opportunities it might not keep someone out of law school but it might affect which one he could go to this mistake didn't only cost points off the exam according to the testing service rescoring would cost them over $100,000 money that came out of the pockets of test takers the question 17 Circle problem was far from the last error on the SAT but errors are likely the least of their concerns these days I mean the SAT is slowly becoming a thing of the Past after covid-19 nearly 80% of undergraduate colleges in the US no longer require any standardized testing and that 1982 exam well it didn't turn out too badly for some how did you uh how did you do on your math sat if I can ask I got an 800 even before that it was clear I was going to go into math I would I did math competitions I did I really liked math do you end up writing any math questions these days a while back I wrote problems for a math competition and were you careful with how you wrote them the wording and I hope so I tried today's Deep dive on one sat question proves there's no substitute for Hands-On exploration to understand and appreciate the everyday phenomena of our world but you don't have to observe Earth from space or make cardboard cutouts to get hands- on with math science and Cutting Edge Tech in fact you can do it from anywhere right now with this video sponsor brilliant and you can get started for free just go to brilliant.org veritasium brilliant will make you a better thinker and Problem Solver in everything from science to math data programming technology you name it just set your goal and Brilliant will design a path to get you there if you liked today's video I highly recommend you 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