Mike Wrote:Set S consists of five consecutive integers, and set T consists of seven consecutive integers. Is the median of the numbers in set S equal to the median of the numbers in set T?
1) The median of the numbers in Set S is 0.
2) The sum of the numbers in set S is equal to the sum of the numbers in set T.
this is another problem about a topic that is one of the darlings of the test authors: namely,
sets of consecutive integers, especially as pertaining to the averages of such sets.
here is the fact that you absolutely must know about these sets:
the mean and the median of a set of consecutive integers are the same; both of them are the middle number (for a set with an odd # of numbers in it) or halfway between the two middle numbers (for a set with an even # of numbers in it).
--
remember that
average = sum / number of data points. you should be ultra-aware of this relationship; the vast majority of problems about the
sum of a set are really concerned with the
average - and vice versa. they are tricky, those test writers.
let '
X' stand for the sum of each of the sets.
(1) is clearly insufficient, as we know nothing whatsoever about set t.
still, take the time to interpret it: it says that the middle number of set s is 0, which also means that the
sum of the elements in set s is 0 (by the fact above).
(2)
using the fact above, we have that the
average (whether mean or median - they're the same) of the numbers in set s is
X/5, and the average (again, mean or median) of the numbers in set t is
X/7.
it's tempting to say 'sufficient' here, because at first glance
X/5 and
X/7 appear to be necessarily different, but they aren't: in the singular case
X = 0, the two will be identical.
therefore, insufficient.
(together)
this tells us that
X = 0, which means that the median of both sets is 0/7 = 0/5 = 0.
sufficient.