Escalator
Problem
At Holborn underground station there is a very long escalator. Two people are in a hurry and so climb the escalator as it is moving upwards, thus adding their speed to that of the moving steps.
The taller of the two people climbs three times as quickly as the smaller person. He has counted the steps that he has taken in getting to the ticket barrier at the top; he took 75 steps.
The smaller person takes 50 steps on the escalator before getting to the top and the ticket barrier.
How many steps are there on the escalator that is used?
Student Solutions
Will of The Ridgeway School; Xing Cong of Raffles Institution, Singapore; Elizabeth of Ipswich High School; and Alexandra of Bancroft's School, Woodford Green, Essex; all used very similar methods. This is Alexandra's beautifully clear solution:
There are 100 steps. When the taller man reaches the top the shorter man will have climbed one third of 75 steps i.e. 25 steps. This means that the shorter man is half way up the escalator when the taller man has reached the top. At this moment, there are 50 steps between the men (the difference between 75 and 25) which means that half the escalator is equal to 50 steps. The whole escalator is therefore double this, that is 100 steps.
Although it takes longer and more work, this problem can be solved by supposing there are k steps on the escalator, that the speed of the escalator is v steps per minute and the speeds of the two men are u and 3u steps per minute. Now you need four equations to find k. You can write down these four equations from the distance, speed and time for the smaller man relative to the ground, for the smaller man relative to the escalator, for the taller man relative to the ground and for the taller man relative to the escalator.