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Course Probability

The document provides an overview of probability concepts, including definitions of random experiments, events, and probability assignments. It explains how to calculate probabilities using examples involving dice and coins, and discusses properties of events such as mutual exclusivity and complements. Additionally, it includes exercises to apply these concepts in practical scenarios.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views47 pages

Course Probability

The document provides an overview of probability concepts, including definitions of random experiments, events, and probability assignments. It explains how to calculate probabilities using examples involving dice and coins, and discusses properties of events such as mutual exclusivity and complements. Additionally, it includes exercises to apply these concepts in practical scenarios.

Uploaded by

rony8salman
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Math Department

Grade 11
Chapter 8
Probability
I- Definitions:
1) Random experiment:
- An experiment is said to be « random » when it verifies the following
three conditions:
• All possible outcomes are known and well defined.

• An outcome is not predictable.

• The experiment could be repeated in the same conditions.

- A set of outcomes is called an event.


➢ Example 1:
A coin is tossed.
• There exist two possible outcomes: Head (H) and tail (T).

• We cannot predict the outcome and we can repeat the experiment


many times.
So, it is a random experiment of two outcomes.
➢ Example 2:
A fair die of six faces numbered from 1 to 6 is rolled.

It is a random experiment of six outcomes.


« Obtaining an odd number » is an event of three elements 1;3 ;5  .
2) Events:
A cubic die is rolled.

 The upper face will carry one of the following digits 1, 2, 3, 4,


5 and 6. If the die is not fake, we cannot predict the outcome
digit and so the experiment is random.
 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 are the outcomes.

 The set of all possible outcomes is the sample space  (« omega »):
{1;2;3;4;5;6}
 An event is a subset of the sample space.
Example: {1;2;3;4;5;6}
 The event « obtaining a number strictly greater than 4 »
is the event 5 ;6





 The event « obtaining 4 » has only one outcome. It is


an elementary event.

 The event « obtaining 7 » is an impossible event. It is


an empty set.
 The event « obtaining one of the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 » is a
certain event. It is the sample space.
II- Probability:
Let  a1; a2 ; a3 ;.........an  be the sample space formed of n
elementary events with n1.
The probability is a mapping P that assigns to each event A of
 , a real number between 0 and 1. This real number is
denoted by P  A  and called probability of A .

P :  0,1
A  P( A)

P  A  is the chance that A will be realized.


For example,
The chance of getting the number 4 while throwing a fair die
is 1 out of 6, or 1 .
6
Properties:
1. If A is an event of a sample space  such that A  a1, a2, a3  , then
P  A   P  a1   P  a2    P  a3  
 

2. If all elementary events have the same probability, the sample space
is said to be equiprobable.
That is, if Card  n then:
 For any elementary event ai  , we have P  ai    1
n.
 For any event E , we have:

P  E   Card E  number of favorable outcomesof E .


Card  number of possibleoutcomesof 
Activity:
A fair six-sided die is rolled.
Here, the experiment is:
Rolling a fair die

1.What is the set of all possible outcomes?


  1,2,3,4,5,6

This is called the universe or the


sample space of the experiment
denoted by (« omega »)
{1;2;3;4;5;6}
2.Find the probability of:
A:« Getting an odd number »
 is called an event.
A  1,3,5  It is a collection of outcomes.
 The probability of an event is:
P A  3  1
6 2

B :« Getting the number 3 »


B  3
B is an elementary event since it
P B   1 has only one accepted outcome
6
{1;2;3;4;5;6}

C :« Getting a number less than 8 »


is called a certain event, since it
C  1,2,3,4,5,6
will for sure occurs.
P  C   6 1
6

D :« Getting the number 7 »


D  is called an impossible event
denoted by since it has no outcomes.
P D   0  0
6 It is an empty set.
{1;2;3;4;5;6}
E :« Getting a number less than 5 »

E  1,2,3,4  P  E   4  2  It is the intersection between the


6 3
two events and denoted by
F :« Getting a multiple of 2 »
.
F   2,4,6  P  F   3  1
6 2  It is the event that
G :« Getting a number less consists of all common outcomes to
than 5 and a multiple of 2 » and
G  E  F   2,4
 The two events must occur
P G   2  1
6 3 simultaneously (At the same time).
EF

E F
{1;2;3;4;5;6}

M :« Getting a number greater than 4 »

M  5,6  P  M   2  1
6 3

N :« Getting a divisor of 4 »
N  1,2,4  P  N   3  1
6 2
H :« Getting a number greater
than 4 and divisor of 4 »

H  M  N  We say that and are incompatible


(mutually exclusive- disjoint)
P H   0  0
6
Since

M N
{1;2;3;4;5;6}
L :« Getting a number less than 4 »
 It is the union between the two
L  1,2,3  P  L   3  1
6 2
events and denoted by
F :« Getting a number multiple of 2 » .

F   2,4,6  P  F   3  1  It is the event that


6 2
K :« Getting a number less consists of all outcomes that
than 4 or multiple of 2 » satisfy at least one of the two
K  L  F   1,2,3,4,6 events and .

P K   5  It is the set of all elements


6
found in or
L F

F
L
Compare P  L  F  and P  L   P  F   P  L  F 

We have:

L  F   2   P  L F   1
6

P  L  F   5
6

P  L   P  F   P  L  F   1  1  1  5


2 2 6 6

So, we get: P  L  F   P(L)  P(F )  P(L  F )


{1;2;3;4;5;6}
W : « Getting the number 4 »

W  4  P W   1
6
R : « Getting a number different from 4 »

R  1,2,3,5,6

 P R   5
6  The event is the complement of
the event denoted by .
 consists of all non-favorable
outcomes to the event

R W

W
We have W  4 , R  1,2,3,5,6 , P W   16 and P  R   5
6

Complete:
1.The event R is the complement of the event W .
In other words, we say that R W
In general
2. R W  

3. R W  

4. P  R   P W   1

 P  R  1 P W 
Properties:
If A and B are two events of a sample space  of a certain
experiment, then:
1. P  A B   P  A   P  B   P  A B 

2. Aand B are incompatible(mutually exclusive-disjoint)


if and only if P  A B   0

3. A and B are complementary if and only if P  A B   0

and P  A B  1





B  A 
 

We have P( A)  P( A) 1

 A B  A B
Remark: Demorgan’s theorem: 




A B  A B
Application 1:
Let  be a sample space.
1.Let A and B be two events of  such that p  A   0.2 , p  B   0.4
and p  A B   0.1
Calculate p  A  and p  A B 
 

 

p  A  1 p  A 


 

1 0.2  0.8

p  A B   p  A   p  B   p  A B 

 0.2  0.4  0.1 0.5


2.Let C and D be two incompatible events of  such
that p  C   0.8 and p  D   0.7
 

   

Calculate p  C  D 

p  C  1 p  C 


 

1 0.8  0.2

p  D  1 p  D 


 

1 0.7  0.3

p  C  D   p  C   p  D   P  C D 

p  C  D   p  C   p  D   0

 0.2  0.3 0  0.5


Application 2:

Complete:

Experiment Sample space

Rolling a fair 4-sided die   1,2,3,4

Flipping a fair coin    Head ,Tail    H ,T 

Flipping a fair coin twice    HH , HT ,TH ,TT 


Application 3:

The students of a secondary class are distributed as shown in the


table below:

Students Lebanese Americans French Total


Boys 5 2 3
Girls 7 20
Total 13

1.Complete the above table.


Students Lebanese Americans French Total
Boys 5 2 3 10
Girls 8 7 5 20
Total 13 9 8 30
Students Lebanese Americans French Total
Boys 5 2 3 10
Girls 8 7 5 20
Total 13 9 8 30

2.One student is chosen at random:


Calculate the probability of each of the following events:
H : « The chosen student is Italian »
H is an impossible event  P  H   0

F : « The chosen student is French »

P  F   P  french   8  4
30 15
B : « The chosen student is a boy »
P  B   P  boy   10  1
30 3
Students Lebanese Americans French Total
Boys 5 2 3 10
Girls 8 7 5 20
Total 13 9 8 30

E : « The chosen student is not American »

P  E   P  not American   21  7
30 10

OR

 
P  E   P  not American  1 P E

1 P  American 

1 9  21  7
30 30 10
Students Lebanese Americans French Total
Boys 5 2 3 10
Girls 8 7 5 20
Total 13 9 8 30

W : « The chosen student is a Lebanese girl »

P W   P  Lebanese and girl   P  Lebanese  girl   8  4


30 15

K : « The chosen student is a girl or Lebanese »

P  K   P  Lebanese  girl 
 P  Lebanese   P  Girl   P  Lebanese Girl 

 13  20  8  25  5
30 30 30 30 6
Application 4:
In a bag there are 12 identical tokens numbered from 1 to 12.
One token is drawn at random. Calculate the probability of
the following events:

P  number 2   1


12
1
P  number 7   12

P  odd number   6  1


12 2 odd  1,3,5,7,9,11

P  primenumber   5 prime   2,3,5,7,11


12
P  multipleof 3   4  1 Multiples of 3  3,6,9,12
12 3
  1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12

6 1
P  Divisior of 12   12 2 Divisiors of 12  1,2,3,4,6,12 

P  evenand multipleof 3   2  1 Even and multiples of 3  6,12


12 6

P  odd number or amultipleof 3  ???


 p(odd  multipleof 3)
 p  odd   p  multipleof 3  p  odd and multipleof 3

 6  4 2 Odd and multiples of 3  3,9


12 12 12
 8 2
12 3
Exercise 1:
A class consists of 30 students. 14 like volleyball and 18 like
basketball. 6 students like both sports.

1. Verify that the number of students that don’t like any of the
two sports is 4 Class
30  8612   4

Volleyball Basketball

8 6 12

4
One student is chosen at random.
2.Calculate the probability of each of the following events:
V : «The student likes volleyball» Class

P V   14  7
30 15 Volleyball Basketball

8 6 12
4
B : «The student likes basketball»

P  B   18  3
30 5 Class

Volleyball Basketball

8 6 12
4
C : «The student likes basketball and volleyball»

P C   P  BV 

 6 1
30 5 Class

Volleyball Basketball

8 6 12
4
A : «The student likes only basketball»

 
P  A  P BV  12  2
30 5
OR
Class
P  A


 P BV 
Volleyball Basketball
 P  B   P  BV 

 18  6
30 30
8 6 12
 12  2
30 5

4
D : «The student doesn’t like any of the two sports»

 
P  D   P BV  4  2
30 15
Class

OR
Volleyball Basketball
P D 


 P BV 
8 6 12
 P  BV 

1 P  BV  44
1  P B  PV  P BV   Demorgan’s Theorem
 
 
1  18  14  6  1 26  4  2 A B  A B
 30 30 30  30 30 15
E : «The student likes only one sport»

  
P  E   P BV  P BV 
 12  8
30 30
Class
 20  2
30 3

Volleyball Basketball

8 6 12
4
F : «The student likes at least one of the two sports»

P  F   P  only one sport   P  two sports 

 20  6  26  13
30 30 30 15

OR
Class
P  F  1 P  no sports 

1 4
30 Volleyball Basketball
 26  13
30 15

OR 8 6 12
P  F   P  BV 
 26  13
30 15
Exercise 2:
A and B are two events of a sample space  such that
P  A  0.2 , P  B   0.5and P  A B   0.7 .
 

Calculate P  A B  .

We have:    
P A B  P A B 1 P  A B  Demorgan’s Theorem
 0.7 1 P  A B  A B  A B
 P  A B   0.3

We have: P  A B   P  A   P  B   P  A B 

 0.3  0.2  0.5  P  A B 


 P  A B   0.4
Exercise 3:
An urn contains 15 balls such that:
Ball Numbered 1 Numbered 2 Total
Red 3 2 5
Blue 2 4 6
Yellow 1 3 4
Total 6 9 15
One ball is drawn at random. Consider the following events:
R :« The selected ball is red »
B :« The selected ball is blue »
A:« The selected ball is numbered 1 »
1.Calculate the probability that:

a. The selected ball is red.

P  Re d   5  1
15 3 1 1 1 2 2
1 1 2 2 2 2
1 2 2 2
b.The selected ball carries the number 2.

P  Carrying the number 2   9  3


15 5
c. The selected ball is red and carries the number 1.
P  Re d  Carrying number 1

 3 1 1 1 1
15 5 2 2
1 1 2 2 2 2
1 2 2 2

d.The selected ball is not yellow and carries the number 2.


P  Not yellow  Carrying number 2 

 6 2
15 5
e. The selected ball is blue or carries the number 1.

P  Blue  Carrying number 1

 P(Blue)  P  Carrying number 1  P  Blue Carrying number 1

 6 6 2
15 15 15

 10  2
1 1 1 2 2
15 3
1 1 2 2 2 2
1 2 2 2
B :« The selected ball is blue »
Calculate P  B 
 

 
P B  P  Not blue ball 
1 1 1 2 2
 9 3
15 5
1 1 2 2 2 2
OR
1 2 2 2
 
P B 1 P  B 

1 6
15
 9 3
15 5
R :« The selected ball is red »
A:« The selected ball is numbered 1 »

Calculate P  A  R 



1 1 1 2 2
Here, A means the 1 1 2 2 2 2
selected ball is numbered 2
1 2 2 2
 
P A R  P Carrying number 2  not red ball 

 7
15
B :« The selected ball is blue »
A:« The selected ball is numbered 1 »

Calculate P  B  A  .


 

P  Not blue  Carrying number 1

 P( Not blue)  P  Carrying number1  P  Not blue Carrying number1

 9  6 4
15 15 15 1 1 1 2 2
 11
15
1 1 2 2 2 2
1 2 2 2

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