Question:

The market value of beams, made of a rare metal, has a unique property: the market value of any such beam is proportional to the square of its length. Due to an accident, one such beam got broken into two pieces having lengths in the ratio 4:9. Considering each broken piece as a separate beam, how much gain or loss, with respect to the market value of the original beam before the accident, is incurred?

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When dealing with proportional changes in values, square the lengths if the value is proportional to the square of the length.
Updated On: Sep 4, 2025
  • 74.23% gain
  • No gain or loss
  • 31.77% loss
  • 42.60% loss
  • 57.40% loss
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The Correct Option is A

Solution and Explanation

Step 1: Let the length of the original beam be \( L \).
The market value of the original beam is proportional to \( L^2 \), so its market value is \( kL^2 \), where \( k \) is the constant of proportionality. The beam is broken into two pieces, with lengths \( 4x \) and \( 9x \). The market value of the first piece is proportional to \( (4x)^2 = 16x^2 \), and the market value of the second piece is proportional to \( (9x)^2 = 81x^2 \).
Step 2: Calculate the total value of the broken pieces.
The total market value of the two broken pieces is: \[ 16x^2 + 81x^2 = 97x^2 \]
Step 3: Compare the values.
The original value was \( kL^2 \). We know that \( L = 13x \) (because the original beam's length is the sum of the lengths of the broken pieces), so: \[ kL^2 = k(13x)^2 = 169k x^2 \] The total market value after the break is \( 97k x^2 \). The difference is: \[ \text{Difference} = 169k x^2 - 97k x^2 = 72k x^2 \]
Step 4: Calculate the percentage change.
The percentage gain is: \[ \frac{72k x^2}{97k x^2} \times 100 = 74.23% \text{ gain} \]
Final Answer: \[ \boxed{74.23% \text{ gain}} \]
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