A box of cookies contains three chocolate and seven butter cookies. Miguel randomly selects a cookie and eats It. Then he randomly selects another cookie and eats It. (How many cookies did he take?) a. Draw the tee that represents the possibilities for the cookie selections. Vrlte the probabilities along each branch of the flee. b. Are the probabilities for the flavor of the SECOND cookie that Miguel selects independern of his first selection? Explain. c. For each complete path through the tree, write the event it represents and find the probabilities. d. Let S be the event that both cookies selected were the same flavor. Find P(S). e. Let T be the event that the cookies selected were different flavors. Find P( T ) by two different methods: by using the complement rule and by using the branches of the tree. Your answers should be the same with both methods. f. Let U be the event that the second cookie selected is a butter cookie. Find P(U).
A box of cookies contains three chocolate and seven butter cookies. Miguel randomly selects a cookie and eats It. Then he randomly selects another cookie and eats It. (How many cookies did he take?) a. Draw the tee that represents the possibilities for the cookie selections. Vrlte the probabilities along each branch of the flee. b. Are the probabilities for the flavor of the SECOND cookie that Miguel selects independern of his first selection? Explain. c. For each complete path through the tree, write the event it represents and find the probabilities. d. Let S be the event that both cookies selected were the same flavor. Find P(S). e. Let T be the event that the cookies selected were different flavors. Find P( T ) by two different methods: by using the complement rule and by using the branches of the tree. Your answers should be the same with both methods. f. Let U be the event that the second cookie selected is a butter cookie. Find P(U).
A box of cookies contains three chocolate and seven butter cookies. Miguel randomly selects a cookie and eats It. Then he randomly selects another cookie and eats It. (How many cookies did he take?)
a. Draw the tee that represents the possibilities for the cookie selections. Vrlte the probabilities along each branch of the flee.
b. Are the probabilities for the flavor of the SECOND cookie that Miguel selects independern of his first selection? Explain.
c. For each complete path through the tree, write the event it represents and find the probabilities.
d. Let S be the event that both cookies selected were the same flavor. Find P(S).
e. Let T be the event that the cookies selected were different flavors. Find P( T) by two different methods: by using the complement rule and by using the branches of the tree. Your answers should be the same with both methods.
f. Let U be the event that the second cookie selected is a butter cookie. Find P(U).
step by step on Microssoft on how to put this in excel and the answers please
Find binomial probability if:
x = 8, n = 10, p = 0.7
x= 3, n=5, p = 0.3
x = 4, n=7, p = 0.6
Quality Control: A factory produces light bulbs with a 2% defect rate. If a random sample of 20 bulbs is tested, what is the probability that exactly 2 bulbs are defective? (hint: p=2% or 0.02; x =2, n=20; use the same logic for the following problems)
Marketing Campaign: A marketing company sends out 1,000 promotional emails. The probability of any email being opened is 0.15. What is the probability that exactly 150 emails will be opened? (hint: total emails or n=1000, x =150)
Customer Satisfaction: A survey shows that 70% of customers are satisfied with a new product. Out of 10 randomly selected customers, what is the probability that at least 8 are satisfied? (hint: One of the keyword in this question is “at least 8”, it is not “exactly 8”, the correct formula for this should be = 1- (binom.dist(7, 10, 0.7,…
Kate, Luke, Mary and Nancy are sharing a cake. The cake had previously been divided into four slices (s1, s2, s3 and s4). What is an example of fair division of the cake
S1
S2
S3
S4
Kate
$4.00
$6.00
$6.00
$4.00
Luke
$5.30
$5.00
$5.25
$5.45
Mary
$4.25
$4.50
$3.50
$3.75
Nancy
$6.00
$4.00
$4.00
$6.00
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