Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
The probability of simultaneous occurrence of at least one of two events A and B is p. If the probability that exactly one of A, B occurs is q, then prove that P(A′) + P(B′) = 2 – 2p + q.
उत्तर
Since P(exactly one of A, B occurs) = q .....(Given)
We get P(A ∪ B) – P(A ∩ B) = q
⇒ p – P(A ∩ B) = q
⇒ P(A ∩ B) = p – q
⇒ 1 – P(A′ ∪ B′) = p – q
⇒ P(A′ ∪ B′) = 1 – p + q
⇒ P(A′) + P(B′) – P(A′ ∩ B′) = 1 – p + q
⇒ P(A′) + P(B′) = (1 – p + q) + P(A′ ∩ B′)
= (1 – p + q) + (1 – P(A ∪ B))
= (1 – p + q) + (1 – p)
= 2 – 2p + q.
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
If A and B are two independent events such that `P(barA∩ B) =2/15 and P(A ∩ barB) = 1/6`, then find P(A) and P(B).
A die, whose faces are marked 1, 2, 3 in red and 4, 5, 6 in green is tossed. Let A be the event "number obtained is even" and B be the event "number obtained is red". Find if A and B are independent events.
Let E and F be events with `P(E) = 3/5, P(F) = 3/10 and P(E ∩ F) = 1/5`. Are E and F independent?
Let A and B be independent events with P (A) = 0.3 and P (B) = 0.4. Find
- P (A ∩ B)
- P (A ∪ B)
- P (A | B)
- P (B | A)
Probability of solving specific problem independently by A and B are `1/2` and `1/3` respectively. If both try to solve the problem independently, find the probability that
- the problem is solved
- exactly one of them solves the problem.
A fair die is rolled. If face 1 turns up, a ball is drawn from Bag A. If face 2 or 3 turns up, a ball is drawn from Bag B. If face 4 or 5 or 6 turns up, a ball is drawn from Bag C. Bag A contains 3 red and 2 white balls, Bag B contains 3 red and 4 white balls and Bag C contains 4 red and 5 white balls. The die is rolled, a Bag is picked up and a ball is drawn. If the drawn ball is red; what is the probability that it is drawn from Bag B?
The odds against a certain event are 5: 2 and odds in favour of another independent event are 6: 5. Find the chance that at least one of the events will happen.
The odds against student X solving a business statistics problem are 8: 6 and odds in favour of student Y solving the same problem are 14: 16 What is the chance that the problem will be solved, if they try independently?
The odds against student X solving a business statistics problem are 8: 6 and odds in favour of student Y solving the same problem are 14: 16 What is the probability that neither solves the problem?
Two hundred patients who had either Eye surgery or Throat surgery were asked whether they were satisfied or unsatisfied regarding the result of their surgery
The follwoing table summarizes their response:
Surgery | Satisfied | Unsatisfied | Total |
Throat | 70 | 25 | 95 |
Eye | 90 | 15 | 105 |
Total | 160 | 40 | 200 |
If one person from the 200 patients is selected at random, determine the probability that person was unsatisfied given that the person had eye surgery
A bag contains 3 yellow and 5 brown balls. Another bag contains 4 yellow and 6 brown balls. If one ball is drawn from each bag, what is the probability that, both the balls are of the same color?
Solve the following:
If P(A ∩ B) = `1/2`, P(B ∩ C) = `1/3`, P(C ∩ A) = `1/6` then find P(A), P(B) and P(C), If A,B,C are independent events.
Solve the following:
Let A and B be independent events with P(A) = `1/4`, and P(A ∪ B) = 2P(B) – P(A). Find P(B)
Solve the following:
Let A and B be independent events with P(A) = `1/4`, and P(A ∪ B) = 2P(B) – P(A). Find `"P"("B'"/"A")`
Let A and B be two independent events. Then P(A ∩ B) = P(A) + P(B)
Two dice are thrown together and the total score is noted. The events E, F and G are ‘a total of 4’, ‘a total of 9 or more’, and ‘a total divisible by 5’, respectively. Calculate P(E), P(F) and P(G) and decide which pairs of events, if any, are independent.
A and B are two events such that P(A) = `1/2`, P(B) = `1/3` and P(A ∩ B) = `1/4`. Find: `"P"("A"/"B")`
Two dice are tossed. Find whether the following two events A and B are independent: A = {(x, y): x + y = 11} B = {(x, y): x ≠ 5} where (x, y) denotes a typical sample point.
If A and B are two events such that P(A) = `1/2`, P(B) = `1/3` and P(A/B) = `1/4`, P(A' ∩ B') equals ______.
If A and B are two events and A ≠ Φ, B ≠ Φ, then ______.
In Question 64 above, P(B|A′) is equal to ______.
If A and B are such events that P(A) > 0 and P(B) ≠ 1, then P(A′|B′) equals ______.
Two events E and F are independent. If P(E) = 0.3, P(E ∪ F) = 0.5, then P(E|F) – P(F|E) equals ______.
If A and B are two independent events then P(A and B) = P(A).P(B).
One card is drawn at random from a well-shuffled deck of 52 cards. In which of the following case is the events E and F independent?
E : ‘the card drawn is a spade’
F : ‘the card drawn is an ace’
One card is drawn at random from a well-shuffled deck of 52 cards. In which of the following case is the events E and F independent?
E : ‘the card drawn is black’
F : ‘the card drawn is a king’
If A, B are two events such that `1/8 ≤ P(A ∩ B) ≤ 3/8` then
Two cards are drawn at random and without replacement from a pack of 52 playing cards. Find the probability that both the cards are black.
Events A and Bare such that P(A) = `1/2`, P(B) = `7/12` and `P(barA ∪ barB) = 1/4`. Find whether the events A and B are independent or not.