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Suppose you have a bag with 10 black and 10 red balls, with the balls of each color numbered 1 to 10. Suppose you pick two balls uniformly at random from the bag.

a. Show that the probability that you pick a ball of each color is 10/19.
b. Show that the probability that you pick a ball of each color, with the number on the red ball being one less than the number on the black ball, is 9/190.

1 Answer

8 votes

Answer:

Explanation:


\text{From the given information:}


(a)


\text{ P(ball of each color)=P(1st ball is black \& 2nd (red)) + P(1st(red) \& 2nd(black)})


\text{ P(ball of each color)} = P(1st (black) * P(2nd \ red \ +P(1st \ red) * P(2nd \ black \ | \ 1st \ red)}


\text{ P(ball of each color)} = \Big((10)/(20)\Big ) * \Big((10)/(19)\Big ) + \Big((10)/(20)\Big ) * \Big((10)/(20)\Big )


\text{ P(ball of each color)} = \Big((10)/(19)\Big )


(b)


\text{If the combination of total no. of black \& red balls with no =10*10 =100}


Then;


\text{the no. of ways red is less than no. of black = 9}


Thus:


\text{P(ball of each color and number on red ball is 1 less than number of black ball is :)}
= \text{P(ball of each color) * P(red is 1 less than black [] ball of each color)}


=\Big( (10)/(19)* (9)/(100) \Big )


= (9)/(190)

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