A bottle initially contains m large pills and n small pills. Each day, a patient randomly chooses one of the pills. If a small pill is chosen, then that pill is eaten. If a large pill is chosen, then the pill is broken in two; one part is returned to the bottle (and is now considered a small pill) and the other part is then eaten. a. Let X denote the number of small pills in the bottle after the last large pill has been chosen and its smaller half returned. Find E[X]. Hint: Define n + m , indicator variables, one for each of the small pills initially present and one for each of the m, small pills created when a large one is split in two. Now use the argument of Example 2m. b. Let Y denote the day on which the last large pill is chosen. Find E[Y]. Hint: What is the relationship between X and Y?
A bottle initially contains m large pills and n small pills. Each day, a patient randomly chooses one of the pills. If a small pill is chosen, then that pill is eaten. If a large pill is chosen, then the pill is broken in two; one part is returned to the bottle (and is now considered a small pill) and the other part is then eaten. a. Let X denote the number of small pills in the bottle after the last large pill has been chosen and its smaller half returned. Find E[X]. Hint: Define n + m , indicator variables, one for each of the small pills initially present and one for each of the m, small pills created when a large one is split in two. Now use the argument of Example 2m. b. Let Y denote the day on which the last large pill is chosen. Find E[Y]. Hint: What is the relationship between X and Y?
Solution Summary: The author explains how to find the value of mathrmEleft, which denotes the number of small pills in the bottle.
A bottle initially contains m large pills and n small pills. Each day, a patient randomly chooses one of the pills. If a small pill is chosen, then that pill is eaten. If a large pill is chosen, then the pill is broken in two; one part is returned to the bottle (and is now considered a small pill) and the other part is then eaten.
a. Let X denote the number of small pills in the bottle after the last large pill has been chosen and its smaller half returned. Find E[X].
Hint: Define
n
+
m
, indicator variables, one for each of the small pills initially present and one for each of the m, small pills created when a large one is split in two. Now use the argument of Example 2m.
b. Let Y denote the day on which the last large pill is chosen. Find E[Y].
Question 3 [10 marks]. Suppose that X, Y and Z are statistically independent
random variables, each of them with a x²(2) distribution.
(a) Find the moment generating function of U = X + 3Y + Z. State clearly and
justify all steps taken.
(b) Calculate the expectation E(U) using the moment generating function.
Could you explain how to do part (c) please
Let X have a uniform distribution on (0,2) and let Y be independent of X with a uniform distribution over (0,3). Determine the cumulative distribution function of S=X+Y.
Please can you help me solve this question. Also, could you explain how you know at which intervals to split up the cases of the fucntion.
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, probability and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
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