Me: I have a small sack with yellow sand, and a big sack with blue sand of the same density.
I take some amount of sand from the small sack, and put it into the big sack.
Then I take the same amount from the big sack, and put it into the small sack.
Now both sacks contain some yellow and some blue sand.
Is there more blue sand in the small sack or yellow sand in the big sack?
ChatGPT:
Let's denote the amount of sand transferred from one sack to the other and then back again as "X" kg. Here's what happens with each step:
After the first transfer: The small sack (originally all yellow sand) has its content reduced by X kg. The big sack (originally all blue sand) gains X kg of yellow sand but loses no blue sand.
After the second transfer: We take X kg from the big sack. Since this sack contains a mixture of blue and yellow sand, we need to determine the proportion of yellow and blue sand in this mixed X kg.
Before the second transfer, the big sack contains X kg of yellow sand and its original quantity of blue sand. Let's assume the original amount of blue sand doesn't change our calculation because we're considering the proportion of yellow to total sand when we take X kg out.
Therefore, when we take X kg out of the big sack, we're removing a proportion of yellow and blue sand based on their proportions in the sack at that moment. If the sack had a total mass of sand (before removing X) of "Original Blue + X", the proportion of yellow sand is X/(Original Blue + X), and the proportion of blue sand is "Original Blue"/(Original Blue + X).
However, the exact fraction of yellow and blue sands removed from the big sack will equate to the fractions present: i.e., if the sack had more blue than yellow, every scoop (in this case, the same amount X) will contain less yellow sand than blue sand by their ratios.
But here's the crucial understanding:
The amount of blue sand in the small sack is the amount of blue sand that was part of the X kg removed from the big sack during the second transfer.
The amount of yellow sand in the big sack after the second transfer is less than X, because some of the yellow sand (which came from the small sack originally) was taken back in the second transfer (since the mix removed contains both yellow and blue, not just yellow).
The critical mathematical realization comes from the mixture theory: when you remove a mix from a larger quantity containing varied parts, you dilute the concentration in the source. But since you're asking for a direct comparison after only a mutual exchange:
You will have removed less yellow from the big sack than you put in because you're removing a mix, meaning some of the original blue is also taken out.
Thus, without needing to plug in specific values:
After the exchange, there will be more blue sand in the small sack than there is yellow sand in the big sack. This is because the portion taken back from the big sack contains both yellow and blue, reducing the amount of original yellow left in the big sack from X. Meanwhile, the small sack would have added to it an amount of blue sand equal to the portion of blue sand in the mixed X kg taken out during the second transfer, which has no prior removal, only an addition.
It's hilarious.
Example
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Me: I have a small sack with yellow sand, and a big sack with blue sand of the same density.
I take some amount of sand from the small sack, and put it into the big sack. Then I take the same amount from the big sack, and put it into the small sack. Now both sacks contain some yellow and some blue sand. Is there more blue sand in the small sack or yellow sand in the big sack?
ChatGPT:
Let's denote the amount of sand transferred from one sack to the other and then back again as "X" kg. Here's what happens with each step:
After the first transfer: The small sack (originally all yellow sand) has its content reduced by X kg. The big sack (originally all blue sand) gains X kg of yellow sand but loses no blue sand.
After the second transfer: We take X kg from the big sack. Since this sack contains a mixture of blue and yellow sand, we need to determine the proportion of yellow and blue sand in this mixed X kg.
Before the second transfer, the big sack contains X kg of yellow sand and its original quantity of blue sand. Let's assume the original amount of blue sand doesn't change our calculation because we're considering the proportion of yellow to total sand when we take X kg out.
Therefore, when we take X kg out of the big sack, we're removing a proportion of yellow and blue sand based on their proportions in the sack at that moment. If the sack had a total mass of sand (before removing X) of "Original Blue + X", the proportion of yellow sand is X/(Original Blue + X), and the proportion of blue sand is "Original Blue"/(Original Blue + X).
However, the exact fraction of yellow and blue sands removed from the big sack will equate to the fractions present: i.e., if the sack had more blue than yellow, every scoop (in this case, the same amount X) will contain less yellow sand than blue sand by their ratios.
But here's the crucial understanding:
The amount of blue sand in the small sack is the amount of blue sand that was part of the X kg removed from the big sack during the second transfer.
The amount of yellow sand in the big sack after the second transfer is less than X, because some of the yellow sand (which came from the small sack originally) was taken back in the second transfer (since the mix removed contains both yellow and blue, not just yellow).
The critical mathematical realization comes from the mixture theory: when you remove a mix from a larger quantity containing varied parts, you dilute the concentration in the source. But since you're asking for a direct comparison after only a mutual exchange:
You will have removed less yellow from the big sack than you put in because you're removing a mix, meaning some of the original blue is also taken out. Thus, without needing to plug in specific values:
After the exchange, there will be more blue sand in the small sack than there is yellow sand in the big sack. This is because the portion taken back from the big sack contains both yellow and blue, reducing the amount of original yellow left in the big sack from X. Meanwhile, the small sack would have added to it an amount of blue sand equal to the portion of blue sand in the mixed X kg taken out during the second transfer, which has no prior removal, only an addition.