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Compound Probability

The document contains 7 questions about calculating compound probabilities of events occurring when rolling dice, drawing balls from bags, selecting items from baskets, etc. For each question, the document identifies the sample space, possible outcomes, probability of individual events, and uses the formula P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A ∩ B) to calculate the probability of events occurring together or separately. The longest question provides a detailed example of finding the probability of drawing a red ball from one box and a white ball from another.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
23 views7 pages

Compound Probability

The document contains 7 questions about calculating compound probabilities of events occurring when rolling dice, drawing balls from bags, selecting items from baskets, etc. For each question, the document identifies the sample space, possible outcomes, probability of individual events, and uses the formula P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A ∩ B) to calculate the probability of events occurring together or separately. The longest question provides a detailed example of finding the probability of drawing a red ball from one box and a white ball from another.

Uploaded by

Wasis Adi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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COMPOUND PROBABILITY

Question & Answer

Question No. 1
A dice is thrown once. Find the probability of getting an even number or a number greater than
3.

Answer
There are two events, named event A and event B with the sample space on the toss of one
dice.

A = the occurrence of an even number.


B = the occurrence of a number greater than 3.

The data is as follows:


S = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}
n(S) = 6

A = {2, 4, 6}
n(A) = 3
so, the probability of event A is :
P (A) = n (A) / n(S) = 3 / 6

B = {4, 5, 6}
n(B) = 3
so, the probability of event B is :
P (B) = n(B) / n(S) = 3 / 6

It is obvious that there are two equal numbers from A and B, that are 4 and 6,
hence:
A ∩ B = {4, 6}
n(A ∩ B) = 2
So the probability of A ∩ B
P (A ∩ B) = n (A ∩ B) / n (S) = 2 / 6

The probability formula of "A or B"


P (A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) − P(A ∩ B)
= 3/6 + 3/6 − 2/6
= 4/6
= 2/3

Question No. 2
Two dices are thrown together at once. The probability that the total number of the two dices is
3 or 10 is.......
A. 2/36

1
B. 3/36
C. 4/36
D. 5/36
D. 6/36

Answer
Two events in the toss of two dices, n(S) = 36,
A = the sum of the numbers is 3
B = the sum of the numbers is 10

From the sample space of throwing two dice, we get


A = {(1, 2), (2, 1)}
B = {(4, 6), (5, 5), (6, 4)}

n (A) = 2 → P(A) = 2/36


n (B) = 3 → P(B) = 3/36
There are not any same number occur between A and B, so n (A ∩B) = 0
So the probability of "A or B" is
P (A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B)
= 2/36 + 3/36
= 5/36

Question No. 3
A bag contains 4 red balls, 3 white balls and 3 black balls. A ball is drawn at random, the
probability of getting a red or black ball is....
A. 4/5
B. 7/10
C. 3/6
D. 2/6
E. 1/10

Answer
The sum of all the balls in the bag is
4 + 3 + 3 = 10 balls. One ball is drawn from 10 balls.
A = occurrence of getting a red ball.
B = occurrence of getting a black ball.

There are 4 red balls, so the probability of getting a red ball is:
P(A) = 4/10
There are 3 black balls, so the probability of getting a black ball is:
P(B) = 3/10
Probability of drawing a red or black ball:
P(A∪B) = P(A) + P(B)
= 4/10 + 3/10
= 7/10
Note:
P (A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B)
It is called a mutually exclusive events or events that can not happen at the same time.

2
Question No. 4
In a group of 30 students, 10 people like math, 15 people like Physics and 5 people like both. If
one person is selected from the group, determine the probability of being selected:
a) students who like math and physics
b) students who like math or physics

Answer
A = event where the chosen like math
B = events where the chosen like physics
P(A) = 10/30
P(B) = 15/30

a) like math and physics


There are 5 students who like math and physics, out of 30 children
P(A∩B) = 5/30

b) like math or physics


P(A∪B) = P(A) + P(B) − P(A∩B)
= 10/30 + 15/30 − 5/30
= 20/30

Question No. 5
Box I contains 2 red balls and 3 white balls. Box II contains 5 red balls and 3 white balls. One
ball is taken from each Box. The probability that a red ball is drawn from Box I and a white ball
is drawn from Box II is....
A. 1/40
B. 3/20
C. 3/8
D. 2/5
E. 31/40

Answer
P(A) = probability of getting a red ball from Box I.
In Box I there are 2 red balls out of 5 balls in Box A. So the probability of getting a red ball from
Box I is
P(A) = 2/5

P(B) = Probability of getting a white ball from Box II.


In Box II there are 3 white balls out of 8 balls in Box II. So the probability of getting a white ball
from Box II is
P (B) = 3/8

The probability that a red ball is drawn from Box I and a white ball is drawn from Box II is
P(A∩B) = P(A) × P(B)
= 2/5 × 3/8
= 6/40
= 3/20

3
The long explanation is as follows:

w1 w2 w3
R1 R2 W1 W2 W3 W
r1 r2 r3 r4 r5
Box II W 1 W W W
W
Box II
1 1 1 1 1
Box I Box II
Box II

The contents of Box I are 2 red, 3 white as follows:


R1, R2, W 1, W 2, W 3.

The contents of Box II are 5 red, 3 white as follows:


r1, r2, r3, r4, r5, w1, w2, w3

Determining the sample space.


The number of sample points is 40, so n(S) = 40. We get it from 5 x 8 = 40. The tree diagram if
necessary is as follows: W
R1, R2, W 1, W 2, W 3 in Box I and its pair in1 Box II:

Box I Box II
r1
r2
r3
r4
R1 r5 8
w1
w2
w3
r1
r2
r3
r4
R2 r5
w1
w2
w3
r1
r2
r3
r4
5 W1 r5
w1
w2
w3
r1
r2
r3
r4
W2 r5
w1
w2
w3
r1
r2
r3
r4
W3 r5
w1
w2
w3

4
S ={(R1, r1), (R1, r2), (R1, r3), (R1, r4), (R1, r5), (R1, w1), (R1, w2), (R1, w3), (R2, w1),.................,
(W 3, w2), (W 3, w3) }
n(S) = 40

A = The occurrence a red ball is drawn from Box I.


A = {(R1, r1), (R1, r2), (R1, r3), (R1, r4), (R1, r5),(R1, w1), (R1, w2), (R1, w3), (R2, r1), (R2, r2),
(R2, r3), (R2, r4), (R2, r5),(R2, w1), (R2, w2), (R2, w3)}
n(A) = 16
hence, P(A) = 16/40

B = The occurrence a white ball is drawn from Box II.


B = {(R1, w1), (R1, w2), (R1, w3), (R2, w1), (R2, w2), (R2, w3), (W 1, w1), (W1, w2), (W 1, w3),
(W 2, w1), (W 2, w2), (W 2, w3), (W 3, w1), (W 3, w2), (W3, w3)}
n(B) = 15
hence, P(B) = 15/40

The intersection between A and B (the same one):


A ∩ B = {(R1, w1), (R1, w2), (R1, w3), (R2, w1), (R2, w2), (R2, w3}
n(A ∩ B ) = 6
hence, P(A ∩ B ) = 6/40 = 3/20

Note:

For
P (A ∩ B) = P(A) × P(B)

It's called an independent event.

Question No. 6
A dice and a coin are tossed once on the table. The probability of getting number five on the
dice and number on the coin is...
A. 1/24
B. 1/12
C. 1/8
D. 2/3
E. 5/6

Answer
A = The occurrence of number 5 appears on the throw of the dice.
Sample space for rolling the dice S = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}
We get
n(S) = 6
n(A) = 1
So, P(A) = 1/6

5
B = the occurrence of number appearing on the toss of a coin.
Sample space for rolling the dice S = {N, P} with N = number, P = picture
n(S) = 2
n(B) = 1
So, P(B) = 1/2

The probability of getting number five on the dice and a number on the coin is thus:
P(A∩B) = P(A) × P(B)
= 1/6 × 1/2 = 1/12

Question No. 7
Basket A is containing 10 oranges, 2 of them are rotten, while basket B is containing 15
mangoes, 3 of them are rotten. Mother wants 5 oranges and 5 good mangoes, the probability
is....
A. 16/273
B. 26/273
C. 42/273
D. 48/273
E. 56/273

Answer
10 oranges in basket A, 2 oranges are rotten, 8 oranges are good.
15 mangoes in basket B, 3 mangoes are rotten, 12 mangoes are good.
2 rotten 3 rotten
8 good 12 good

10 oranges 15 mangoes

A : the occurrence that 5 good oranges are selected from basket A.


B : the occurrence that 5 good mangoes are selected from basket B.

Determine the probability of the event A


Taking 5 oranges from 10 oranges in basket A, produces as many ways (sample points) as

Meanwhile, taking 5 good oranges from 8 good oranges in basket A produces as many ways as

So the chance of getting 5 good oranges from basket A

Determine the probability of the event B


Taking 5 mangoes from 15 mangoes in basket B, produces as many ways as

6
Meanwhile, taking 5 good mangoes from 12 good mangoes in basket A produces as many ways as

So the chance of getting 5 good mangoes from basket B

So the probability of getting 5 good oranges from basket A and 5 good mangoes from basket B is

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