Roulette Marti decides to keep placing a 1$ bet on number 15 in consecutive spins of a roulette wheel until she wins. On any spin, there's a 1-in-38 chance that the ball will land in the 15 slot.

a. How many spins do you expect it to take for Marti to win?

b. Would you be surprised if Marti won in 3 or fewer spins? Compute an appropriate probability to support your answer.

Short Answer

Expert verified

(a) Mean of X E(X)=1p=11/38=38

(b) It can be seen that the probability of 3 or fewer is too low So, it is surprising if Martin won in 30 or fewer spins.

Step by step solution

01

Part (a) Step 1: Given Information

Number of spins =15

Probability of the ball landing in any slot =138.

Concept used:

If the trials are repeated until a success occurs and the probability of success is same in each trial, then it is the case of geometric distribution.

In this case, a bet is placed until a win and the probability of winning in each chance is same and was independent. So, this follows geometric distribution.

02

Part (a) Step 2: Simplificaiton

Let X be the number of spins for a success

So, for Geometric with p=138

P(X=k)=(1-p)k-1×p

Mean of X,

E(X)=1p=11/3s=38

03

Part (b) Step 1: Given information

Number of spins is 15.

Probability of the ball landing in any slot is1/38

04

Part (b) step 2: Calculation

The likelihood of winning in three or fewer spins

P(X3)=0+1-1381-1×138+1-1382-1×138+1-1383-1×138P(X3)=0.07689

It is clear that the likelihood of three or fewer is excessively low.

So it's surprising Martin didn't win in 30 or less spins.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

In which of the following situations would it be appropriate to use a Normal distribution to approximate probabilities for a binomial distribution with the given values of n and p ?

a. n=10,p=0.5

b. n=40,p=0.88

c. n=100,p=0.2

d. n=100,p=0.99

e.n=1000,p=0.003

Benford’s law and fraud

(a) Using the graph from Exercise 21, calculate the standard deviation σY. This gives us an idea of how much variation we’d expect in the employee’s expense records if he assumed that first digits from 1 to 9 were equally likely.

(b) The standard deviation of the first digits of randomly selected expense amounts that follow Benford’s law is σX=2.46. Would using standard deviations be a good way to detect fraud? Explain your answer.

Spoofing (4.2) To collect information such as passwords, online criminals use "spoofing" to direct Internet users to fraudulent websites. In one study of Internet fraud, students were warned about spoofing and then asked to log into their university account starting from the university's home page. In some cases, the log-in link led to the genuine dialog box. In others, the box looked genuine but, in fact, was linked to a different site that recorded the ID and password the student entered. The box that appeared for each student was determined at random. An alert student could detect the fraud by looking at the true Internet address displayed in the browser status bar, but most just entered their ID and password.

a. Is this an observational study or an experiment? Justify your answer.

b. What are the explanatory and response variables? Identify each variable as categorical or quantitative.

Baby elk Refer to Exercise 77 . How surprising would it be for more than 4 elk in the sample to survive to adulthood? Calculate an appropriate probability to support your answer.

Long or short? Put the names of all the students in your statistics class in a hat. Mix up the names, and draw 4 without looking. Let X = the number whose last names have more than six letters.

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Math Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free