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#1 2007-08-06 05:06:22

gamblermike
Member
Registered: 2007-08-06
Posts: 1

Probability question

I need help with some analysis of the following:
I have a jar with 13 balls, 5 red, 3 white and 5 blue.

What is the probability for picking 8 balls and I get 4 red, 2 white and 2 blue, random pick?
What is the thought analsis for solving this?

Thanks,
Mike

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#2 2007-08-06 08:18:52

mathsyperson
Moderator
Registered: 2005-06-22
Posts: 4,900

Re: Probability question

(I'm assuming here that balls don't get replaced after they're picked. If I'm wrong then the numbers need to be changed a bit.)

First, work out the probability of picking 4 reds, then 2 whites, then 2 blues (in order).

For the first pick, there are 5 red balls out of 13 possible ones, so the probability of picking red is 5/13.

For the second, there are 4 reds out of 12, so the probability of picking a 2nd red is 4/12 = 1/3.
Using the same reasoning, the probabilities for the 3rd and 4th reds are 3/11 and 2/10 (=1/5)respectively.

Now we want the probabilities of picking whites. There are 3 white balls out of a total of 9, so the probability of the first white is 3/9 = 1/3.
Similarly, the probability for the second white is 2/8 = 1/4.

Finally, the same reasoning shows that the probabilities for the blue balls are 5/7 and 4/6 (=2/3).

To get the probability of all this happening, we multiply everything together.

5/13 * 1/3 * 3/11 * 1/5 * 1/3 * 1/4 * 5/7 * 2/3 = 150/540540 = 5/18018.

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That's the probability for RRRRWWBB in that order. There are many other orders the would work, however. The total amount is found by 8! / (4!*2!*2!) = 420.

The probability for each of these orders is the same, and so the final answer is (5*420)/18018 = 50/429, or around 1/9.


Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.

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#3 2007-08-07 01:48:22

gamblermike
Member
Registered: 2007-08-06
Posts: 1

Re: Probability question

Thank you for your insight.  It is very helpful.

Mike

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#4 2007-08-10 02:57:10

misdamike55
Member
Registered: 2007-08-10
Posts: 1

Re: Probability question

Z Is A Standard Normal Random Variable
How Do You Do This One
P(z>-2.08)

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