57.7k views
5 votes
We have k coins. The probability of Heads is the same for each coin and is the realized value q of a random variable Q that is uniformly distributed on [0, 1]. We assume that conditioned on Q = q, all coin tosses are independent. Let T; be the number of tosses of the ith coin until that coin results in Heads for the first time, for i = 1, 2,..., k. (T; includes the toss that results in the first Heads.)

You may find the following integral useful: For any non-negative integers k and m,

∫ qᵏ(1-q)ᵐdq = k!m!/(k+m+1)

Find the PMF of T1. (Express your answer in terms of t using standard notation.)
Fort 1, 2,...,
PT₁ (t) =

User David Bern
by
7.8k points

1 Answer

6 votes

Final answer:

The PMF of the time until the first heads appears, T1, for a sequence of coin tosses with a uniformly distributed probability of heads is 1/t!, where t is the number of tosses until the first heads occurs.

Step-by-step explanation:

The student is asking about the probability mass function (PMF) of the time until the first heads appears (T1) in a sequence of coin tosses, where the probability of heads q is a random variable that is uniformly distributed between 0 and 1. Given the scenario, we know that the coin tosses are independent, and the probability of T1 being equal to t is the probability that the first (t-1) tosses result in tails and the t-th toss results in heads.

First, let's denote the probability of heads as 'q' and the probability of tails as '1-q'. Then, the PMF of T1 can be calculated as:

  • For the first (t-1) coin tosses, we have tails, which occurs with probability (1-q)^(t-1).
  • On the t-th toss, we get heads, which occurs with probability q.

Since q is uniformly distributed, the expected value of q can be found by integrating over the possible values of q:

PT₁(t) = ∫ (1-q)^(t-1) * q dq

Using the given integral formula, we can solve this to get the PMF:

PT₁(t) = (t - 1)! * 0! / (t + 0 + 1) = 1/t!
Therefore, the PMF of T1, expressed in terms of t, is 1/t!

User Pfinferno
by
7.7k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories