Academic Integrity: tutoring, explanations, and feedback — we don’t complete graded work or submit on a student’s behalf.

Problem 4 (20 points) You have a fair five-sided dice. The sides of the dice are

ID: 3909932 • Letter: P

Question

Problem 4 (20 points) You have a fair five-sided dice. The sides of the dice are numbered from 1 to 5. Each dice roll is independent of all others, and all faces are equally likely to come out on top when the dice is rolled Suppose you roll the dice twice. Part a roll resulted in 5, and event C Let event A to be "the total of two rolls is 10", event B be "at least one be "at least one roll resulted in1" Is event A independent of event B? . Is event A independent of event C? Part b Let event D be "the total of two rolls is 7", event E be "the difference between the two roll outcomes is exactly 1", and event F be "the second roll resulted in a higher number than the first o" Are events E and F independent? Are events E and F independent given event D?

Explanation / Answer

Totally, there are 25 different outcomes in the sample space.

Part A:

1. Inorder to get a total of 10, we should get a 5 on both rolls.

Therefore A ? B, and

P(B|A) = P(A?B)P(A)=P(A)P(A)=1

We observe that to get at least one 5 showing, we can have 5 on the first roll, 5 on the second roll, or 5 on both rolls, which corresponds to 9 distinct outcomes in the sample space. Therefore

P(B)=925?P(B|A)

Hence, A and B are not independent.

Ans NO.

2. Given event A, we know that both roll outcomes must be 5. Therefore, we could not have event C occur, which would require at least one 1 showing. Formally, there are 9 outcomes in C, and

P(C)=925

but, P(C|A)=0?P(C)

Ans NO.

Part (B)

(1) NO

Out of the total 25 outcomes, 5 outcomes correspond to equal numbers in the two rolls. In half of the remaining 20 outcomes, the second number is higher than the first one. In the other half, the first number is higher than the second. Therefore,

P(F)=1025

There are eight outcomes that belong to event E:

E = {(1, 2),(2, 3),(3, 4),(4, 5),(2, 1),(3, 2),(4, 3),(5, 4)}.

To find P(F|E), we need to compute the proportion of outcomes in E for which the second number is higher than the first one:

P(F|E)=12?P(F)

Hence, Ans is NO.

2. YES,

Conditioning on event D reduces the sample space to just four outcomes

{(2, 5),(3, 4),(4, 3),(5, 2)}

which are all equally likely. It is easy to see that

P(E|D)=24=12P(F|D)=24=12P(E?F|D)=14=P(E|D)P(F|D)

So, Answer is YES.

Hire Me For All Your Tutoring Needs
Integrity-first tutoring: clear explanations, guidance, and feedback.
Drop an Email at
drjack9650@gmail.com
Chat Now And Get Quote