Probability: Homework is part of the collection col10555 written by Barbara Illowsky and Susan Dean and provides a number of homework exercises related to Probability with contributions from Roberta Bloom.
Suppose that you have 8 cards. 5 are green and 3 are yellow. The 5 green cards are numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. The 3 yellow cards are numbered 1, 2, and 3. The cards are well shuffled. You randomly draw one card.
= card drawn is green
= card drawn is even-numbered
List the sample space.
Are
and
mutually exclusive? Justify your answer numerically.
A special deck of cards has 10 cards. Four are green, three are blue, and three are red. When a card is picked, the color of it is recorded. An experiment consists of first picking a card and then tossing a coin.
List the sample space.
Let
be the event that a blue card is picked first, followed by landing a head on the coin toss. Find
.
Let
be the event that a red or green is picked, followed by landing a head on the coin toss. Are the events
and
mutually exclusive? Explain your answer in 1 - 3 complete sentences, including numerical justification.
Let
be the event that a red or blue is picked, followed by landing a head on the coin toss. Are the events
and
mutually exclusive? Explain your answer in 1 - 3 complete sentences, including numerical justification.
An experiment consists of first rolling a die and then tossing a coin:
List the sample space.
Let
be the event that either a 3 or 4 is rolled first, followed by landing a head on the coin toss. Find
.
Let
be the event that a number less than 2 is rolled, followed by landing a head on the coin toss. Are the events
and
mutually exclusive? Explain your answer in 1 - 3 complete sentences, including numerical justification.