A binomial experiment consists of 500 trials. The probability of success for each trial is .4 . What is the probability of obtaining the number of successes indicated in Problems 51-58? Approximate these probabilities to two decimal places using a normal curve. (This binomial experiment easily passes the rule-of-thumb test, as you can check. When computing the probabilities, adjust the intervals as in Examples 3 and 4.) 190 − 205
A binomial experiment consists of 500 trials. The probability of success for each trial is .4 . What is the probability of obtaining the number of successes indicated in Problems 51-58? Approximate these probabilities to two decimal places using a normal curve. (This binomial experiment easily passes the rule-of-thumb test, as you can check. When computing the probabilities, adjust the intervals as in Examples 3 and 4.) 190 − 205
Solution Summary: The author calculates the probability of obtaining 190-205 successes in a binomial experiment consisting of 500 trials.
A binomial experiment consists of
500
trials. The probability of success for each trial is
.4
. What is the probability of obtaining the number of successes indicated in Problems 51-58? Approximate these probabilities to two decimal places using a normal curve. (This binomial experiment easily passes the rule-of-thumb test, as you can check. When computing the probabilities, adjust the intervals as in Examples 3 and 4.)
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Assume that a company is considering purchasing a machine for $50,000 that will have a five-year useful life and a $5,000 salvage value. The
machine will lower operating costs by $17,000 per year. The company's required rate of return is 15%. The net present value of this investment
is closest to:
Click here to view Exhibit 12B-1 and Exhibit 12B-2, to determine the appropriate discount factor(s) using the tables provided.
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$6,984.
$11,859.
$22,919.
○ $9,469,
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7. [10 marks]
Let G
=
(V,E) be a 3-connected graph. We prove that for every x, y, z Є V, there is a
cycle in G on which x, y, and z all lie.
(a) First prove that there are two internally disjoint xy-paths Po and P₁.
(b) If z is on either Po or P₁, then combining Po and P₁ produces a cycle on which
x, y, and z all lie. So assume that z is not on Po and not on P₁. Now prove that
there are three paths Qo, Q1, and Q2 such that:
⚫each Qi starts at z;
• each Qi ends at a vertex w; that is on Po or on P₁, where wo, w₁, and w₂ are
distinct;
the paths Qo, Q1, Q2 are disjoint from each other (except at the start vertex
2) and are disjoint from the paths Po and P₁ (except at the end vertices wo,
W1, and w₂).
(c) Use paths Po, P₁, Qo, Q1, and Q2 to prove that there is a cycle on which x, y, and
z all lie. (To do this, notice that two of the w; must be on the same Pj.)
University Calculus: Early Transcendentals (4th Edition)
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Discrete Distributions: Binomial, Poisson and Hypergeometric | Statistics for Data Science; Author: Dr. Bharatendra Rai;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHhyy4JMigg;License: Standard Youtube License