A First Course in Probability (10th Edition)
A First Course in Probability (10th Edition)
10th Edition
ISBN: 9780134753119
Author: Sheldon Ross
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 3, Problem 3.1P

Two fair dice are rolled. What is the conditional probability that at least one lands on 6 given that the dice land on different numbers?

Expert Solution & Answer
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To determine

To Calculate: The conditional probability that atleast one lands on 6 given that the dice land on different numbers.

Answer to Problem 3.1P

The Conditional probability that atleast one dice lands on 6 given that the dice land on different numbers is 16.

Explanation of Solution

Given information:

Tossing of two dice and number on both the dice are different.

Concept and Formula Used:

Probability of an event =Number of favorable outcomes Total number of outcomes .

Conditional Probability- Probability of an event when one event already happened.

P(E/F)=P(EF)P(F)

Calculation:

The tossing of two dice result in 36 outcomes.

Let ‘E’ be the event that atleast one dice lands on 6.

Sample space for event ‘E’ are (1,6),(2,6),(3,6),(4,6),(5,6)&(6,6)

Let ‘F’ be the event that both the numbers are different on the dice.

Sample space for event ‘F’ are

(1,2),(1,3),(1,4),(1,5),(1,6)(2,1),(2,3),(2,4),(2,5),(2,6)(3,1),(3,2),(3,4),(3,5),(3,6)(4,1),(4,2),(4,3),(4,5),(4,6)(5,1),(5,2),(5,3),(5,4),(5,6)(6,1),(6,2),(6,3),(6,4),(6,5)

We have to find the probability of getting atleast one dice lands on 6 and given that numbers on both the dice are different.

P(E/F)=P(Event E when event F is given)=P(EF)P(F).

EF=common of event E and F=(1,6),(2,6),(3,6),(4,6)&(5,6) . So,

P(EF)=536,P(F)=3036.

Therefore,

P(E/F)=P(EF)P(F)=5 36 30 36=536×3630=16

Conclusion:

The Conditional probability that atleast one dice lands on 6 given that the dice land on different numbers is 16.

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Chapter 3 Solutions

A First Course in Probability (10th Edition)

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In an election, candidate A...Ch. 3 - As a simplified model for weather forecasting,...Ch. 3 - A bag contains a white and b black balls. Balls...Ch. 3 - A round-robin tournament of n contestants is a...Ch. 3 - Prove directly thatP(EF)=P(EFG)P(GF)+P(EFGC)P(GCF)Ch. 3 - Prove the equivalence of Equations (5.11) and...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.27TECh. 3 - Prove or give a counterexample, if E1 and E2 are...Ch. 3 - In Laplaces rule of succession (Example 5e ), show...Ch. 3 - In Laplaces rule of succession (Example 5e),...Ch. 3 - Suppose that a nonmathematical, but...Ch. 3 - In a game of bridge, West has no aces What is the...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.2STPECh. 3 - How can 20 balls, 10 white and 10 black, be put...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.4STPECh. 3 - An urn has r red and w white balls that are...Ch. 3 - An urn contains b black balls and r red balls. One...Ch. 3 - A friend randomly chooses two cards, without...Ch. 3 - Show that P(HE)P(GE)=P(H)P(G)P(EH)P(EG). Suppose...Ch. 3 - You ask your neighbor to water a sickly plant...Ch. 3 - Six balls are to be randomly chosen from an urn...Ch. 3 - A type C battery is in working condition with...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.12STPECh. 3 - Balls are randomly removed from an urn that...Ch. 3 - A coin having probability .8 of landing on heads...Ch. 3 - In a certain species of rats, black dominates over...Ch. 3 - a. In Problem 3.70b, find the probability that a...Ch. 3 - For the k-out-of-n system described in Problem...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.18STPECh. 3 - Prob. 3.19STPECh. 3 - Suppose that there are n possible outcomes of a...Ch. 3 - If A flips vand B flips n fair coins, show that...Ch. 3 - Prove or give counterexamples to the following...Ch. 3 - Let A and B be events having positive probability....Ch. 3 - Rank the following from most likely to least...Ch. 3 - Two local factories, A and B, produce radios. 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