Gift of Gems
Four jewellers share their stock. Can you work out the relative values of their gems?
Problem
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Four jewellers had respectively 8 rubies, 10 sapphires, 100 pearls and 5 diamonds.
Each gave one gem from their collection to each of the rest.
Afterwards they noticed that they all had collections of gems of precisely equal value.
Can you work out the relative values of each gem?
Can you then work out how much each jeweller gained or lost?
This problem comes from Lilavati , a standard work on Hindu mathematics written by Bhasakaracharyya, who lived in the twelfth century of the Christian era. The book is written as instruction for a young and beautiful woman called Lilavati and it is thought that she was Basakaracharyya's
daughter.
Getting Started
Try writing down what each jeweller has after they have all given their gifts.
These four collections all have equal value.
Use this to deduce other statements you can make about the value of each kind of gem.
Student Solutions
To work out how many of each type of gem each jeweller had, Fai from Bangkok Patana School used a diagram like this one, and this explanation (where $r, s , p, d$ represent the values of 1 ruby, 1 sapphire, 1 pearl and 1 diamond respectively):
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We have to subtract 3 gems from each jeweller because there are 4 jewellers and each jeweller gives one gem to each of the other jewellers.
Then we add one from each of the other 3 types of gem because we will gain one gem from each jeweller. For example the ruby jeweller had 8 rubies at the start then we subtract 3 rubies, which is 5 rubies then add one pearl, one diamond and one sapphire.
At the end we have the following expressions:
J1: $5r+p+d+s$
J2: $7s+r+p+d$
J3: $97p+d+s+r$
J4: $2d+s+r+p$
Simon from Sefton Park School in the UK displayed this nicely in a table:
J1 | J2 | J3 | J4 |
$5r$ | $r$ | $r$ | $r$ |
$s$ | $7s$ | $s$ | $s$ |
$p$ | $p$ | $97p$ | $p$ |
$d$ | $d$ | $d$ | $2d$ |
4 rubies = 6 sapphires = 96 pearls = 1 diamond
Amrit, Ray, James, Fai, Srushti, Archita and Alicia, Olivia & Bipanshu formed equations using pairs of expressions. This is Alicia, Olivia & Bipanshu's work, from the Ark Academy in the UK:
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Most people gave their answers in terms of $p$, like Amrit from Hymer's College in the UK, who wrote:
Using J1=J2, we have $$\begin{align}5r+s+p+d&=7s+r+p+d\\
5r+s&=7s+r\\
4r&=6s\\
r&=\frac{3}{2}s\end{align}$$
Using J2=J3, we have $$\begin{align}7s+r+p+d&=97p+r+s+d\\
7s+p&=97p+s\\
6s&=96p\\
s&=16p \hspace{5mm} \text{(or }p=\frac{1}{16}s\text{)}\end{align}$$
Using J3=J4, and substituting $p=\frac{1}{16}s$ and $r=\frac{3}{2}s$, we have
$$\begin{align}\frac{97}{16}s+\frac{3}{2}s+s+d&=\frac{3}{2}s+s+\frac{1}{16}s+2d\\
\frac{137}{16}s+d&=\frac{41}{16}s+2d\\
d&=6s\end{align}$$
Substituting $s=16p$ into $r=\frac{3}{2}s$ and $d=6s$, we get $d=96p$ and $r=24p.$ So the relative values of the gems in terms of $p$ are $p=p,$ $s=16p,$ $r=24p,$ $d=96p$
Raymond from Farm Cove Intermediate School in New Zealand, decided that:
Because $p$ is worth the least we will use J3 to compare to the others.
This gives $97p+r+s+d=5r+s+p+d$ simplifies to $96p=4r\implies r=24p$
$97p+r+s+d=7s+r+p+d$ simplifies to $96p=6s\implies s=16p$
$97p+r+s+d=2d+s+r+p$ simplifies to $96p=d$
Hamish from Watford Grammar School for Boys added pairs of expressions to form equations, and Lalit from Devonport High School for Boys subtracted pairs of expressions, and both solved the equations using a similar process.
Adithya from Hymers College and Liam from Grange Primary School in Australia used similar methods not involving algebra. This is Liam's explanation:
Each jeweller has 1 of each jewel with the addition of their original gems -3 {because they have given away 3 of their original gems}.
The ruby jeweller has 4 more rubies than anyone else {since the ruby jeweller has 5 rubies left and the others each have 1 ruby}, the sapphire jeweller has 6 extra, the pearl jeweller has 96 extra and the diamond jeweller has 1 extra diamond, meaning:
4 rubies = 6 sapphires = 96 pearls = 1 diamond
If you divide 96 by 4 you get 24. This means that 1 ruby is worth 24 pearls.If you do this with every gem you will find 1 diamond is worth 96 pearls, 1 sapphire is worth 16 pearls and 1 ruby is worth 24 pearls.
Joel, Frankie and Zach all used algebraic versions of Liam's method. Frankie from the Ravensbourne School in the UK wrote:
$5r + 1s + 1p + 1d = 7s + 1r + 1p + 1d= 97p + 1r + 1s + 1d = 2d + 1r + 1s + 1p$
I decided to subtract $1s,$ $1p,$ $1r$ and $1d$ from all 4 {'sides' of the equation}:
$4r = 6s = 96p = 1d$
To work out how much each jeweller had lost or gained, Liam, James, Archita, Srushti, Ray and Alicia, Olivia & Bipanshu found the values of each collection in pearls to compare 'before' and 'after' values. Zach and Hamish both used a table to display the information clearly:
Jeweller | Start value in pearls | End value in pearls | Gain in pearls |
J1 | $8r=192p$ | $233p$ | $233p-192p=41p$ |
J2 | $10s=160p$ | $233p$ | $233p-160p=73p$ |
J3 | $100p$ | $233p$ | $233p-100p=133p$ |
J4 | $5d=480p$ | $233p$ | $233p-480p=-247p$ |
Fai, Joel and Frankie used their previous working to express the loss or gain of each jeweller in terms of the gems they had at the beginning. For example, Frankie had rearranged the equations and relative values to get
$s=\dfrac{2}{3}r,$ $p=\dfrac{1}{24}r$, $d=4r$
So J1 has: $5r+\dfrac{2}{3}r+\dfrac{1}{24}r+4r=\dfrac{233}{24}r$ worth of gems. {From $8r$, this is} a gain of $\dfrac{41}{24}r$, which is about $1.71r.$
Amrit and Lalit also found the changes correcly, Amrit by subtracting algebraic expressions, and Lalit assigning a value of 1000 to each collection. Well done to you all!
Teachers' Resources
Why do this problem?
This problem is a quirky puzzle that gives students an opportunity to express algebraically what is known in order to deduce relationships. It is a nice example of a problem that can be solved using algebra but also by finding a neat way to think about the situation.
Possible approach
This problem could follow on from work on What's it Worth?
Once students have had a chance to think about the problem, take some time to discuss solution methods. One neat way to think about the problem is to realise that passing on three gems and receiving three different gems back leaves each jeweller with one of each gem plus their original collection minus 4...
Key questions
What does each jeweller start with?
What does each jeweller end up with?
What can you deduce, knowing that each jeweller ends up with the same?