0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views

Chapter Review: K K K K K

Uploaded by

Nacon Pro
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
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views

Chapter Review: K K K K K

Uploaded by

Nacon Pro
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
You are on page 1/ 7

Chapter review

3 a

x 1 2 3 4

P(X = x) 2 5 8 11
26 26 26 26

19
b P(2 < X 4) = P(X = 3) + P(X = 4) = 26

4 a For a discrete uniform distribution, the probability of choosing each counter must be equal.

1
b i P(X = 5) =
16

ii The prime numbers are 2, 3, 5, 7, 11 and 13

6 3
P(X is prime) = 
16 8

8 1
iii P(3 X < 11) = 
16 2

5 a

x 1 2 3 4 5

P(Y = y) 1 2 3 4 5
k k k k k

1 2 3 4 5
    1
k k k k k

15
= 1, k = 15
k

x 1 2 3 4 5

P(Y = y) 1 2 3 1 4 5 1
 
15 15 15 5 15 15 3

c P(Y > 3) = P(Y = 4) + P(Y = 5) = 4


15  155  159  53

© Pearson Education Ltd 2019. Copying permitted for purchasing institution only. This material is not copyright free. 1
6 a

t 0 1 2 3 4

P(T = t) 0.754 = 0.25 × 0.753 × 4 0.252 × 0.752 × 6 0.253 × 0.75 0.254 =


0.316 = 0.422 = 0.211 × 4 = 0.0469 0.00391

b P(T < 3) = P(T = 0) + P(T = 1) + P(T = 2) = 0.949 (to 3 s.f.)

S 1 2 3 4 5

P(S = s) 0.25 0.25 × 0.75 0.25 × 0.752 0.25 × 0.753 0.25 × 0.754 + 0.755
= 0.188 = 0.141 = 0.105 = 0.316

d P(S > 2) = P(S = 3) + P(S = 4) + P(S = 5) = 0.563 (to 3 s.f. using exact figures)

7 a The probability distribution for X is:

x 1 2 3 4 5 6
1 2 3 4 5 6
P(X = x)
21 21 21 21 21 21

b P(2  X 5)  P(X  3)  P(X  4)  P(X  5)  3


21  214  215  12
21  7

c E( X )  1 211  2  212  3  213  4  214  5  215  6  216


 211 (1  4  9  16  25  36)  91 21  3
13

d E( X 2 )  1 211  4  212  9  213  16  214  25  215  36  216


 211 (1  8  27  64  125  216)  441 21  21

Var( X )  E( X 2 )  (E( X )) 2
 21   133   21  169
2
9

 189
9  9 
169 20
9  2.22 (2 d.p.)

e Var (3 2 X )  Var(  2 X  3)


 ( 2) 2 Var(X )
 4  209  809  8.89 (2 d.p.)

f E( X 3 )  å x 3 P( X  x)
 13  211  23  212  33  213  43  214  53  215  63  216
= 1
21 (1  16  81  256  625  1296)
 2275
21  325
3  108.33 (2 d.p.)

8 a Probabilities sum to 1, so:


0.1 0.2  0.3 r  0.1 0.1  1
r  1 0.8  0.2
© Pearson Education Ltd 2019. Copying permitted for purchasing institution only. This material is not copyright free. 2
8 b P(1 X  2)  P( X  1)  P( X  0)  P( X  1)  0.2  0.3  0.2  0.7

c E( X )  2  0.1 (1)  0.1 0  0.3  1 0.2  2  0.1 3 0.1


 0.2  0.2  0.2  0.2  0.3  0.3
E(2 X  3)  2 E( X )  3  (2  0.3)  3  3.6

d E( X 2 )  4  0.1 1 0.1 0  0.3 1 0.2  4  0.1 9  0.1


 0.4  0.2  0.2  0.4  0.9  2.1
Var( X )  E( X 2 )  (E( X ))2
 2.1 (0.3)2  2.1 0.09  2.01
Var(2 X  3)  2 2 Var(X )
 4  2.01  8.04

9 a Probabilities sum to 1, so:


5  b  b  5 1
1 1

2b  1  52  53
b  103

b E( X )  0  15  1 103  2  105  13
10  1.3

c E( X 2 )  0  15  1 103  4  105  10
23
 2.3
Var ( X )  E( X 2 )  ( E( X ))2
 2.3 1.32  2.3 1.69  0.61

d P(X 1.5)  P( X  0)  P( X  1)  15  103  0.5

10 a Probabilities sum to 1, so:


k (1  0)  k (1  1)  k (2  1)  k (3  1)  1
k  k  2k  1
4k  1
k  14  0.25

b The probability distribution for X is:

x 0 1 2 3
1 1 1
P(X = x) 4 0 4 2

E(X )  0  14  1 0  2  14  3  12  12  32  2
E( X 2 )  0  14  1 0  4  14  9  12  112  5.5

c Var( X )  E( X 2 )  (E( X )) 2  5.5  22  5.5  4  1.5


Var(2 X  2)  2 2 Var( X )  4 1.5  6

© Pearson Education Ltd 2019. Copying permitted for purchasing institution only. This material is not copyright free. 3
11 a P(1  X 2)  P(X  2)  18

b E(X )  0  14  1 21  2  81  3  81  21  41  83  89

c E(3 X  1)  3E(X )  1  27
8  1  198

d E(X 2 )  0  14  1 21  4  81  9  81  12  12  98  178
Var( X )  E ( X 2 )  ( E ( X )) 2  178   89   136
2
64
 64
81
 64
55

e E(log(X  1))  å log( X 1) P( X  x)


 log(0  1)  14  log(1  1)  12  log(2  1)  81  log(3  1)  81
= 0  12 log 2 + 81 log 3 + 18 log 4
 0.5  0.30102  0.125  0.47712  0.125  0.60206
= 0.2854 (4 d.p.)

12 a The probability distribution for X2 is:

x2 1 4 9 19
P(X2 = x2) 0.4 0.2 0.1 0.3

P(3  X 2  10)  0.2  0.1  0.3

b E( X )  1 0.4  2  0.2  3 0.1 4  0.3  2.3

c E( X 2 )  1 0.4  4  0.2  9  0.116  0.3  6.9


Var( X )  E( X 2 )  (E( X ))2
 6.9  (2.3) 2  6.9  5.29  1.61

 3 X  3 1 3 2.3 0.7
d E    E( X )     0.35
 2  2 2 2 2 2

e E  Xå X P( X  x)

 1 0.4  2  0.2  3  0.1 4  0.3


 0.4  0.2828  0.1732  0.6
 1.4560 (4 d.p.)

f  
E 2  X  å 2 X P( X  x)
 21  0.4  22  0.2  23  0.1 24  0.3
 0.5  0.4  0.25  0.2  0.125  0.1 0.0625  0.3
 0.2  0.05  0.0125  0.01875
 0.28125

© Pearson Education Ltd 2019. Copying permitted for purchasing institution only. This material is not copyright free. 4
13 a Probabilities sum to 1, so:
0.1  p  q  0.3  0.1  1
p  q  0.5 (1)

E( X )  0.1  2 p  3q  1.2  0.5  3.1


2 p  3q  1.3 ( 2)

b Multiply equation (1) by 2:


2 p  2q  1 ( 3)

Subtract equation (3) from equation (2)


q  0.3

Substitute for q in equation (1)


p  0.3  0.5 Þ p  0.2

c E( X )  1 0.1 2  0.2  3 0.3  4  0.3  5  0.1


 0.1 0.4  0.9  1.2  0.5  3.1

E( X 2 )  1 0.1 4  0.2  9  0.3  16  0.3 25  0.1


 0.1 0.8  2.7  4.8  2.5  10.9

Var( X )  E( X 2 )  (E( X ))2  10.9  (3.1)2  10.9  9.61  1.29

d Var(2 X  3)  2 2 Var( X )  4 1.29  5.16

14 a The probability distribution for X is:

x 1 2 3 4 5
P(X = x) k 2k k 2k 3k

Probabilities sum to 1, so:


k  2k  k  2k  3k  9k  1
k  19

b E(X )  1k  2  2k  3k  4  2k  5  3k
 31k  319

c E(X 2 )  1k  4  2k  9k  16  2k  25  3k
 125k  125
9

Var( X )  E( X 2 )  ( E ( X ))2

9   9   81  81  81
2
 125 31 1125 961 164

 2.02 (3 s.f.)

d Var (3 2 X )  (2)2 Var ( X )  4  2.02  8.1 (1 d.p.)

© Pearson Education Ltd 2019. Copying permitted for purchasing institution only. This material is not copyright free. 5
15 a Probabilities sum to 1, so:
0.1  0.3  a  b  1
a  b  0.6 (1)
Rearrange the equation for Y to get X in terms of Y:
3 X  Y  1 Þ X  13 Y  13
E ( X )  E  13 Y  13   13 E (Y )  13  13  10
11
 13  30
21
 0.7
E( X )  å x P( X  x)
 0.1 a  2b  0.7
So a  2b  0.8 ( 2)
Subtract equation (1) from equation (2), which gives:
b  0.2
So by substituting the value for b in equation (1)
a  0.2  0.6 Þ a  0.4

b E( X 2 )  1 0.1 0  0.3  1 0.4  4  0.2  1.3


Var( X )  E( X 2 )  (E( X ))2  1.3 0.7 2  1.3  0.49  0.81

c Var(Y )  Var(1 3X )  (3)2 Var( X )  9  0.81  7.29

d P(Y  2 > X )  P(3X  1 2 > X )


 P(2 X > 1)  P( X > 0.5)
 0.3 0.4  0.2  0.9

16 a A discrete uniform distribution.

b Any distribution where all the probabilities are the same. An example is throwing a fair die.

c There are 5 possible values. So as the variable has discrete uniform distribution, each value has a
1
5 (= 0.2) probability. E(X) can be found by symmetry, as the probability distribution is uniform,
or by:
E( X )  0.2(0 1 2  3 4)  0.2 10  2

d E( X 2 )  0.2(0  1 4  9  16)  0.2  30  6


Var( X )  E( X 2 )  (E( X ))2  6  2 2  6  4  2

© Pearson Education Ltd 2019. Copying permitted for purchasing institution only. This material is not copyright free. 6
Challenge
1 1 1 1 1
E( X )  1            n 
n n n n n
1
 1          n 
n
1 n
 åi
n i 1
1 n(n  1)
  (using first sum in hint)
n 2
n 1

2
E( X 2 )  1         n 2 
1
n
1 n
 å i2
n i 1
1 n(n  1)(2n  1)
  (using second sum in hint)
n 6
(n  1)(2n  1)

6

Var( X )  E ( X 2 )  ( E ( X ))2
(n  1)(2n  1) (n  1) 2
 
6 4
2(n  1)(2n  1) 3(n  1)2
 
12 12
4n  6n  2  3n  6n  3
2 2
 (multiplying out)
12
n 1
2
 (simplifying terms)
12
(n  1)(n  1)
 (factoring)
12

© Pearson Education Ltd 2019. Copying permitted for purchasing institution only. This material is not copyright free. 7

You might also like