The Indy 500 is every May right before Memorial Day. In this famous race, cars speed around the track 200 times to drive 500 miles. With the cars driving 200 miles an hour, it’s very exciting to watch. More than 100,000 people watch the race, and they’re all hungry. On race day the Indy 500 food stands sells more than 10,000 pounds of hamburgers, which need enough ketchup to fill 10 bathtubs. And of course there’s the gasoline, because the cars get hungry, too!
Wee ones: There are 6 cars at the starting line and 1 more just joined them. How many cars are there now?
Little kids: Can you count down from 10 to start the race? Count out loud! Bonus: 3 people in history have each won the Indy 500 4 times. How many races have they won altogether?
Big kids: The 33 cars line up in rows of 3 at the start. If you’re stuck in the next-to-last row, what number row is that? Bonus: If each of the 33 cars burns 20 gallons of gas in the race, how much gas do they use together? (Hint if needed: What if each car used just 2 gallons? And how does 20 gallons differ from that?)
The sky’s the limit: The 200 laps around the track add up to 500 miles. If you wanted to try driving just 10 miles of it, how many times would you have to drive around the track?
Answers:
Wee ones: 7 cars at the starting line!
Little kids: 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1! Bonus: 12 races.
Big kids: The 10th row, since there are 11 in total. Bonus: 660 gallons.
The sky’s the limit: 4 laps. If you cut the 500 miles into 200 pieces (the laps), you find that the track is 2 ½ miles long. So you’d need 4 laps to drive 10 miles. Another way to solve it: 10 miles is 1/50 of 500, so you need to drive 1/50 of 200 laps.