In: Statistics and Probability
Question asked:
The probability that Jim goes to work by taxi is 0.3. He works 6 days in a week.
(b) Find the probability that Jim goes to work by taxi in exactly 2 consecutive mornings.
How to compute the question (b)? And why it isn't 6C2·0.3^2·0.7^4?
We cannot apply Binomial Distribution in this problem because the question is not " Find the probability that Jim goes to work by taxi in exactly 2 mornings" but the question is: " Find the probability that Jim goes to work by taxi in exactly 2 consecutive mornings".
So,
the correct answer to the given question is not: 6C2·0.3^2·0.7^4.
The correct answer is as follows:
Given:
Probability that Jim goes to work by taxi in one day = 0.3
Number of days Jim goes to office = 6 days.
So,
For 6 days of working, average number of days Jim goes to office by taxi = 6 X 0.3 = 1.8
So,
For going to office on 2 consecutive days:
For the first of the two consecutive days, Probability of going by taxi = 1.8/ 6 = 0.3, since total of 6 days are available.
For the second day of the two consecutive days, Probability of going by taxi = 1.8/5 = 0.36, since 1 day out of 6 days is gone for the first day.
Thus, Probability that Jim goes to office by taxi on 2 consecutive days = 0.3 X 0.36 = 0.1080
So,
Answer is:
0.1080