Final answer:
The probabilities p(x) for a binomial random variable with given parameters are calculated using the binomial probability formula and correspond to 0.288, 0.32805, 0.1536, and 0.32805 for the respective cases given.
Step-by-step explanation:
To compute p(x) for a binomial random variable X with the given parameters, we can use the binomial probability formula:
The probability of getting exactly x successes in n trials is given by:
P(X = x) = (n choose x) * p^x * q^(n-x)
Where:
- (n choose x) is the binomial coefficient (nCx) which calculates the number of different combinations of x successes can occur in n trials
- p is the probability of success on a single trial
- q is the probability of failure on a single trial (q = 1 - p)
Using the formula, we calculate:
- For n=3, x=2, and p=0.4, q is 0.6. Therefore, P(X = 2) = (3 choose 2) * (0.4)^2 * (0.6)^1 = 3 * 0.16 * 0.6 = 0.288.
- For n=5, x=4, and p=0.9, q is 0.1. Therefore, P(X = 4) = (5 choose 4) * (0.9)^4 * (0.1)^1 = 5 * 0.6561 * 0.1 = 0.32805.
- For n=4, x=2, and p=0.8, q is 0.2. Therefore, P(X = 2) = (4 choose 2) * (0.8)^2 * (0.2)^2 = 6 * 0.64 * 0.04 = 0.1536.
- For n=5, x=1, and p=0.1, q is 0.9. Therefore, P(X = 1) = (5 choose 1) * (0.1)^1 * (0.9)^4 = 5 * 0.1 * 0.6561 = 0.32805.
These probabilities are based on the binomial distribution which is appropriate for scenarios with a fixed number of independent trials, each with the same probability of success, and only two possible outcomes: success or failure.