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Activities for Families

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Balance Scale

Investigation, Bonus Material, Stage 4 – Make It Count

A balance scale is a device for telling when two things have the same weight. The scale is usually supplied with a set of weights that are used to weigh objects. Here are some interesting investigations you can do if you restrict the weights you are allowed to use.

Question 1

If you only have weights that are 4 units and 7 units, then the things you can weigh exactly are the same as you found in the flower petal investigation.

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Question 2

Which things can you weigh exactly if the weights are on either side of the scale?

Question 3

How do the answers of these two questions change if instead of using weights of size 4 and 7, you use 3 and 8? Or perhaps you use 4 and 6 or 8 and 12?

Question 4

What happens if you have one weight each for each of the weights in a doubling progression of 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16? How many ways can you weigh something that weighs 13? Does it change things if you allow weights on both sides? What is the largest weight you can measure? This situation is related to the binary number system.

Question 5

What happens if you use single weights in the tripling progression 1, 3, 9, and 27? Which things can you weigh if you allow those weights on both sides?

Question 6

What happens if the weights are the Fibonacci Numbers? Is there more than one way to weigh some weights? Find a restriction on the Fibonacci weights so that there is only one way to get each weight.