Do you have a friend or a sibling
that's always competing with you
Our alien friends Bleebop and Mark
with their custom-built rockets,
to be the judge of a space race to their moon.
The only problem is that they are starting
Bleebop is on an asteroid 240 miles from the moon,
and Mark is on one 150 miles away.
Don't worry, it's not rocket science.
Solving this equation is as simple as DIRT.
We can decide who the winner is
using the D=RT formula, or DIRT.
This stands for distance equals rate times time.
In the case of Bleebop and Mark,
we will only know the distance they traveled
It'll be up to us to find the rate
and see what information we get.
two,
one,
Bleebop and Mark's rockets go zipping
across the galaxy towards their moon,
After a few close calls with a wandering satellite,
Mark arrives first in two hours,
and Bleebop gets there one hour later.
Looks like Mark has the faster rocket,
but let's check out the results with our DIRT equation.
Make four columns and three rows.
Use DIRT to remember what to fill in.
Each rocket will have information
Bleebop's rocket went 240 miles,
and the time is 1 hour after Mark,
Because we don't know Mark or Bleebop's rate,
that number is going to be a variable
for the variable to find its value.
Remembering DIRT, write down D=RT.
150 miles equals x times 2 hours.
on the right side of the equation.
Mark's rate is 75 miles per hour.
It's the amount of miles over one hour.
Let's set up the same equation for Bleebop and see.
D=RT
240 miles equals x times 3 hours.
on the right side of the equation.
Bleebop's rate is 80 miles per hour.
Wow, even though Bleebop got there one hour later,
it turns out he had the faster rocket.
but with aliens, you can never really tell.
Thanks to DIRT, you now know how to calculate
rate,
can you use the distance formula?
You don't even need to be watching a space race.
As long as you know two pieces of information
you can calculate any moving vehicle or object.
Now, the next time you're in a car,
exactly when you'll be arriving,