Separate the 13 spades from a standard deck of cards. Three of them are picture
ID: 3237512 • Letter: S
Question
Separate the 13 spades from a standard deck of cards. Three of them are picture cards: the Jack, Queen, and King. Now draw two cards at random from these 13 spades. Find the probability (rounded to the nearest .01%) that (a) both of the cards drawn are picture cards, if they are drawn i. without replacement. ii. with replacement. (b) at least one of the two cards drawn is a picture card, if they drawn i. without replacement. ii. with replacement. An 11-digit number is randomly chosen by drawing 11 times from a box that has one ticket for each of the numbers 0 to 9 and writing down numbers on the tickets in the order in which they are drawn. Find the chance that exactly 2 of the digits in the number chosen are sevens.Explanation / Answer
4)
a)
Without replacement
No of ways of selecting 2 picture cards = 3C2 = 3
No of ways of selecting 2 cards from 13 card = 13C2
Probablity = 3/13C2 = 3.85% probability
b)
With replacement
No of ways of selecting 2 picture cards = 3*3 = 9
No of ways of selecting 2 out of 13 = 13*13 = 169
Probability = 9/169 = 5.33 %
b)
Probability of not a picture card = (13-3)C2/13C2 = 57.69
Probabilityof atleast one is a picture cards = 100-57.59 = 42.31%
With replacement
Probability of not a picture card = (13-3)(13-3)/13*13 = 100/169 = 59.17%
Probability of selecting atleast one picture card = 100-59.17% = 40.83%
Related Questions
drjack9650@gmail.com
Navigate
Integrity-first tutoring: explanations and feedback only — we do not complete graded work. Learn more.