![]() |
| Cube w/ a decreasing side |
|
Stacey Koprince
MGMAT STAFF
|
Cool pictures! Read the problem again carefully. The question asks "by what percentage will the volume of the CUBE decrease" - that is, it is still a cube, even after the length change. And a cube's sides are all the same length, by definition.
Also, you will get problems wrong on the test if you try to think this hard about them - I agree that some of the OG / GMAT questions are not so nice, but they wouldn't do this to you! The above is standard wording - because a cube's sides all have the same length, you only have to talk about "the side" because "the side" is the same everywhere on a cube. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
Spencer
Guest
|
Thanks for answering that. I'm not sure what happened, but somewhere along the way I became a GMAT detail oriented psycho.
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
|
yeah. well, i must say that the pictures rather made my day, too. a couple of comments: 1) the pyramid you've drawn is impossible. if you look at the front or back triangular face, you'll notice that the base of those 'triangles' is 9 units long, yet somehow the higher segments drawn parallel to the base - which must be shorter - are also 9 units long. if both of those are 9, then those faces can't be triangles; they must be infinitely long rectangular stripes, of width 9 everywhere, of which the sides will never meet at the top to finish off the triangle. to see that this is the case, look back at your first diagram, which is admirably drawn, and notice that the yellow sides are parallel to each other. that most certainly can't be part of a pyramid, as it's impossible for any of the sides of a pyramid to be parallel (else they couldn't come together in a point at the top). 2) since you're being very literal, i'll go ahead and note that your diagram doesn't actually accomplish what you set out to accomplish anyway: your diagram actually decreases the lengths of two parallel sides of the cube. in any case, all nitpicking aside, make sure you learn the important lesson here, which is that gmat problems don't tend to deal with particularly nasty shapes. if you look through the geometry problems in the og - even the rather difficult ones - you'll notice that the vast majority of them still employ simple shapes such as circles, rectangles, squares, cubes, circular cylinders, and the like. they just find exceptionally creative ways to ask tricky questions about them, that's all. |
||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||
| Cube w/ a decreasing side |
|
||
|
Powered by phpBB © phpBB Group
Content © Manhattan GMAT Forums
*GMAT and GMAT CAT are registered trademarks of the Graduate Management Admission Council,
which neither sponsors nor endorses this test preparation service.
Content © Manhattan GMAT Forums
*GMAT and GMAT CAT are registered trademarks of the Graduate Management Admission Council,
which neither sponsors nor endorses this test preparation service.


