by esledge Sun Jul 27, 2008 7:06 pm
It is because of the positive and negative possibilities.
For (1) we have p^2 in the expression. If p #0, then it is either negative or positive. However, p^2 will always be positive because it has an even exponent. We are allowed to divide by p because it is not 0, but we also know that we don't need to "flip the sign" of the inequality because p^2 is positive.
For (2), we cannot just divide by p^3 because there are two cases:
If p<0, then qp^3 > tp^3 becomes q < t (we flip the sign).
If p>0, then qp^3 > tp^3 becomes q > t (don't flip the sign).
Without knowing p's sign, we don't know which option applies.
Try some numbers to see this.
If p = -1, then:
q(-1)^3 > t(-1)^3
-q > -t
q < t
One possibility: q = 2 and t = 3 works because -2>-3 and 2<3.
If p = +1, then:
q(1)^3 > t(1)^3
q > t
One possibility: q = 3 and t = 2 works.
Emily Sledge
Instructor
ManhattanGMAT