Originally posted by Simmo
hey didnt he say the prob for A rat to exit out of a CERTAIN exit is 1/5 then allothers 1/5 after that...so it should be 1/625
The probability of one rat leaving by a certain exit is 1/5, but the probability of four rats leaving by the same exit (irrespective of which exit it is) is 1/5<sup>3</sup>.
Originally posted by kaseita
cause you've done
p(at least 2 )= 1 - [p(1 rat each exit) + p(2 rat one exit)]
cause p[none] either means no rat goes through that exit, which doesn't make sense, or means that one rat goes in each exit.
so p[one] would be that one two rats go through the same exit?
Yes. Let me rewrite my first line a bit more clearly:
P(at least 2 rats leaving by the same exit) = 1 - [P(no rats leaving by the same exit) + P(one rat leaving by the same exit)]
where:
no rats leaving by the same exit = all rats leaving through different exits
one rat leaving by the same exit = two rats going through the same exit
You have to be careful how you write it, or you'll confuse the inversion. Most students know P(at least one) = 1 - P(none), but it's often blindly memorised without an actual understanding of why this is so.
P(a group of events occurring) = 1 - P(all other events occurring)
P(all events except the '0' event occurring) = 1 - P(the '0' event occurring)
P(at least one) = 1 - P(none)
P(all events except the '0' and '1' event occurring) = 1 - P(the '0' event OR the '1' event occurring)
P(at least two) = 1 - [P(none) + P(one)]
Does that make sense?
This question is probably easier if you rephrase it.
"What is the probability of at least 2 rats leaving by the same exit?"
We know that the exit through which the first rat leaves doesn't matter.
So it's really asking,
"What is the probability of at least 1 rat leaving by the exit the first rat went through?"
Which is also the same as
"What is the probability of at least 1 rat leaving by a certain exit?"
P(at least one) = 1 - P(none)
P(at least one) = 1 - [5/5 * 4/5 * 3/5 * 2/5]
P(at least one) = 101/125
And spice girl is correct. I just proved myself wrong. Yeah, well, annoying when you do that.
The reason I was wrong is that P(one) is really two rats leaving by the same exit and so isn't one of the complementary events - my answer would have given the probability of at least three rats leaving by the same exit. Oh yeah and BlackJack solved it too; well done.