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ECE 313: Midterm Exam I

The document provides information about an upcoming midterm exam for the ECE 313 course at the University of Illinois on October 10, 2011. It includes 5 practice problems covering topics such as probability, random variables, and network reliability. Specifically, problem 1 covers probabilities of dice rolls, problem 2 uses Bayes' theorem for conditional probabilities of food treats, problem 3 involves expectations of geometric random variables, and problems 4 and 5 deal with other probability concepts and calculations.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views2 pages

ECE 313: Midterm Exam I

The document provides information about an upcoming midterm exam for the ECE 313 course at the University of Illinois on October 10, 2011. It includes 5 practice problems covering topics such as probability, random variables, and network reliability. Specifically, problem 1 covers probabilities of dice rolls, problem 2 uses Bayes' theorem for conditional probabilities of food treats, problem 3 involves expectations of geometric random variables, and problems 4 and 5 deal with other probability concepts and calculations.

Uploaded by

spitzersglare
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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University of Illinois

Fall 2011

ECE 313: Midterm Exam I


Monday October 10, 2011 6:40 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 1320 DCL (10 and 11 am sections) and 151 Everitt (noon and 1pm sections)
1. (a) There are 36 possible outcomes if you roll two dice simultaneously. Of these outcomes, 6 have both dice showing the same number: they both show i {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}. Of the remaining outcomes, 10 have number 2 showing on exactly one of the dice: pairs of the form (2, i) or (i, 2) for i {1, 3, 4, 5, 6}. Therefore, P {two dice show dierent numbers and that neither die shows 2} =
36610 36

=5 9.

(b) If all dice show dierent numbers then one can use total probability by conditioning on the number shown by one of the dice (say die A) and requiring the other two dice (say dice B and C ) to be dierent among themselves and dierent from the chosen number. That is, P {all dice show dierent numbers} 6 5 1 = 6 i=1 P {die B = die C and neither shows i|die A = i}P {die A = i} = i=1 9 6 =5 9. 2. (a) Using the law of total probability P {Sara consumes the treat} = P {Sara consumes the treat|treat is M& M bar} P {treat is M& M bar} +P {Sara consumes the treat|treat is raisin box} P {treat is raisin box} 1 3 2 1 = + 5 4 5 4 1 = . 4 (b) Using Bayes rule P [treat is raisin box|Sara consumes the treat] = P {Sara consumes the treat|treat is raisin box} P {treat is raisin box} P {Sara consumes the treat} 2 1 5 4
1 4

= =

2 . 5

3. (a) N is a Geometric random variable with parameter 1 6 . Thus E [N ] = 6. (b) The event N 3 is equivalent to stating that the rst two throws didnt yield the number 6. Since each throw is independent of the other, P {N = 2 + k |N > 2} = P {N = 2 + k } P {N > 2} = P {N = k } by the memoryless property of Geometric r.v. 5 6
k1

1 . 6

Hence the expected value of N given that N > 2 is, by denition,

E [N |N > 2] =
k=1

(k + 2) P {N = 2 + k |N > 2} (k + 2) P {N = k }
k=1

= 2 + E [N ] = 8. 4. (a) P {M = k } = Substituting k = 3 we get the answer of (b) Using LOTUS 1 E M


52 263

k 1 =

5 6
25 432 .

k1

1 1 . 6 6

=
k=1

1 P {M = k } k 1 36 5 6
k1

=
k=1

1 . 6

5. (a) It is easy to see that X can take on values 0, 40, 200, and 240. (b) The link between Springeld and Champaign-Urbana fails when the direct link fails and at least one of the two upper links (Springeld-Decatur and Decatur-Champaign1 Urbana) fails. The probability of the former event is 2 and the probability of the latter 3 event is 4 . So the probability of outage is the product of these two probabilities: 3 8.

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