Suppose that the probability that a passenger will miss a flight is 0.0959. Airlines do not like flights with empty seats, but it is also not desirable to have overbooked flights because passengers must be "bumped" from the flight. Suppose that an airplane has a seating capacity of 53 passengers. (a) If 55 tickets are sold, what is the probability that 54 or 55 passengers show up for the flight resulting in an overbooked flight? (b) Suppose that 59 tickets are sold. What is the probability that a passenger will have to be "bumped"? (c) For a plane with seating capacity of 280 passengers, what is the largest number of tickets that can be sold to keep the probability of a passenger being "bumped" below 1%? (a) The probability of an overbooked flight is 0.0267 (Round to four decimal places as needed.) (b) The probability that a passenger will have to be bumped is 0.4964 . (Round to four decimal places as needed.) (c) For a plane with seating capacity of 280 passengers, the largest number of tickets that can be sold while keeping the probability of a passenger being "bumped" below 1% is (Type a whole number.)
Suppose that the probability that a passenger will miss a flight is 0.0959. Airlines do not like flights with empty seats, but it is also not desirable to have overbooked flights because passengers must be "bumped" from the flight. Suppose that an airplane has a seating capacity of 53 passengers. (a) If 55 tickets are sold, what is the probability that 54 or 55 passengers show up for the flight resulting in an overbooked flight? (b) Suppose that 59 tickets are sold. What is the probability that a passenger will have to be "bumped"? (c) For a plane with seating capacity of 280 passengers, what is the largest number of tickets that can be sold to keep the probability of a passenger being "bumped" below 1%? (a) The probability of an overbooked flight is 0.0267 (Round to four decimal places as needed.) (b) The probability that a passenger will have to be bumped is 0.4964 . (Round to four decimal places as needed.) (c) For a plane with seating capacity of 280 passengers, the largest number of tickets that can be sold while keeping the probability of a passenger being "bumped" below 1% is (Type a whole number.)
Chapter8: Sequences, Series,and Probability
Section8.7: Probability
Problem 4ECP: Show that the probability of drawing a club at random from a standard deck of 52 playing cards is...
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