Two fair dice are tossed, and the face on each die is observed.

  1. Use a tree diagram to find the 36 sample points contained in the sample space.
  2. Assign probabilities to the sample points in part a.
  3. Find the probability of each of the following events:

A = {3showing on each die}

B = {Sum of two numbers showing is}

C = {Sum of two numbers showing is even}

Short Answer

Expert verified
  1. Tree Diagram
  2. Table
  3. P(A)=136,P(B)=16,P(C)=12

Step by step solution

01

Finding the sample points contained in sample space

Two dice are tossed and the face on each dice is observed. The first dice is tossed and the face on the dice is written. After that, the second dice is tossed and the face on this dice is observed. The first branches show the face on the first dice and the ends show the face on the second dice.

02

Assigning probability to sample points

Two fair dice are tossed, the faces on one dice are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 .

Therefore, the total number of possible outcomes are 62=36

03

Finding the probability of event A,B and C

A=3showing on each die andS=total outcome (sample space)

One observes 3 on both the dice only one time.

Hence nB=1 and nS=36

localid="1662212210908" PA=FavorablenumberofoutcomesTotalnumberofoutcomes=nAnS=136

Therefore, the probability of getting 3 on each die is localid="1662212168718" 136.

B=Sum of two numbers showing is 7

One observes sum of two numbers showing as 7 when the sample points are 1,6,2,5,3,4,4,3,5,2,6,1

Therefore, nB=6

localid="1662212248503" PB=FavorablenumberofoutcomesTotalnumberofoutcomes=nBnS=636=16

Thus, the probability of getting two numbers whose sum is 7 is16.

C=Sum of two numbers is even

One observes sum of two numbers is even when the sample points are

1,1,1,3,1,5,2,2,2,4,2,6,3,1,3,3,3,54,2,4,4,4,6,5,1,5,3,5,5,6,2,6,4,6,6

Therefore, nC=18

localid="1662212281500" PC=FavorablenumberofoutcomesTotalnumberofoutcomes=nCnS=1836=12

Hence, the probability of getting two numbers whose sum is an even number is 12.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Museum management. Refer to the Museum Management and Curatorship (June 2010) study of the criteria used to evaluate museum performance, Exercise 2.14 (p. 74). Recall that the managers of 30 leading museums of contemporary art were asked to provide the performance measure used most often. A summary of the results is reproduced in the table. Performance Measure Number of Museums Total visitors 8 Paying visitors 5 Big shows 6 Funds raised 7 Members 4


Performance Measure

Number of Museums

Total visitors

8

Paying visitors

5

Big shows

6

Funds raised

7

Members

4

a. If one of the 30 museums is selected at random, what is the probability that the museum uses total visitors or funds raised most often as a performance measure?

b. Consider two museums of contemporary art randomly selected from all such museums. Of interest is whether or not the museums use total visitors or funds raised most often as a performance measure. Use a tree diagram to aid in listing the sample points for this problem.

c. Assign reasonable probabilities to the sample points of part b.

d. Refer to parts b and c. Find the probability that both museums use total visitors or funds raised most often as a performance measure.

Guilt in decision making.Refer to the Journal of Behavioral Decision Making(January 2007) study of theeffect of guilt emotion on how a decision maker focuseson a problem, Exercise 3.48 (p. 183). The results (numberresponding in each category) for the 171 study participantsare reproduced in the table below. Suppose one of the 171participants is selected at random.

Emotional

State

Choose

Stated Option

Do Not Choose

Stated Option

Totals

Guilt

Anger

Neutral

45

8

7

12

50

49

57

58

56

Totals

60

111

171

a.Given that the respondent is assigned to the guilty state, what is the probability that the respondent chooses the stated option?

b.If the respondent does not choose to repair the car, what is the probability that the respondent is in the anger state?

c.Are the events {repair the car} and {guilty state }
independent?

Male nannies. In a survey conducted by the International Nanny Association (INA) and reported on the INA Web site (www.nanny.org), 4,176 nannies were placed in a job in a given year. Only 24 of the nannies placed were men. Find the probability that a randomly selected nanny placed during the last year is a male nanny (a “mannie”).

Suppose the events B1and B2are mutually exclusive and complementary events, such thatP(B1)=.75andP(B2)=.25 Consider another event A such that role="math" localid="1658212959871" P(AB1)=.3, role="math" localid="1658213029408" P(AB2)=.5.

  1. FindP(B1A).
  2. FindP(B2A)
  3. Find P(A) using part a and b.
  4. Findrole="math" localid="1658213127512" P(B1A).
  5. Findrole="math" localid="1658213164846" P(B2A).

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