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by pvg
3179 days ago
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Von Neumann was renowned for his great prowess at mental maths. A famous (if also not entirely serious) story: "When posed with a variant of this question involving a fly and two bicycles, John von Neumann is reputed to have immediately answered with the correct result. When subsequently asked if he had heard the short-cut solution, he answered no, that his immediate answer had been a result of explicitly summing the series (MacRae 1992, p. 10; Borwein and Bailey 2003, p. 42)." From http://mathworld.wolfram.com/TwoTrainsPuzzle.html |
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"the trains take one hour to collide (their relative speed is 100 km/h and they are 100 km apart initially). Since the fly is traveling at 75 km/h and flies continuously until it is squashed (which it is to be supposed occurs a split second before the two oncoming trains squash one another), it must therefore travel 75 km in the hour's time."
So if von Neumann was solving it by explicitly summing the series, as the anecdote claims, then he was doing it wrong :)