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MIT6 041SCF13 Assn03

This document is a problem set from MIT's Probabilistic Systems Analysis course. It contains 6 problems involving probability concepts like random variables, probability mass functions, expectation, and combinatorics. The problems cover topics like hat picking probabilities, card game probabilities, expectations of random variables, dice rolling probabilities, and maximum possible jelly bean color distributions in jars. Students are asked to calculate probabilities, expectations, variances, plot probability mass functions, and solve combinatorial counting problems related to these scenarios.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
60 views3 pages

MIT6 041SCF13 Assn03

This document is a problem set from MIT's Probabilistic Systems Analysis course. It contains 6 problems involving probability concepts like random variables, probability mass functions, expectation, and combinatorics. The problems cover topics like hat picking probabilities, card game probabilities, expectations of random variables, dice rolling probabilities, and maximum possible jelly bean color distributions in jars. Students are asked to calculate probabilities, expectations, variances, plot probability mass functions, and solve combinatorial counting problems related to these scenarios.

Uploaded by

Mary Davis
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science


6.041/6.431: Probabilistic Systems Analysis
(Fall 2010)

Problem Set 3
Due September 29, 2010
1. The hats of n persons are thrown into a box. The persons then pick up their hats at random (i.e.,
so that every assignment of the hats to the persons is equally likely). What is the probability
that
(a) every person gets his or her hat back?
(b) the first m persons who picked hats get their own hats back?
(c) everyone among the first m persons to pick up the hats gets back a hat belonging to one of
the last m persons to pick up the hats?
Now assume, in addition, that every hat thrown into the box has probability p of getting dirty
(independently of what happens to the other hats or who has dropped or picked it up). What is
the probability that
(d) the first m persons will pick up clean hats?
(e) exactly m persons will pick up clean hats?
2. Alice plays with Bob the following game. First Alice randomly chooses 4 cards out of a 52-card
deck, memorizes them, and places them back into the deck. Then Bob randomly chooses 8 cards
out of the same deck. Alice wins if Bob’s cards include all cards selected by her. What is the
probability of this happening?
3. (a) Let X be a random variable that takes nonnegative integer values. Show that


E[X] = P(X ≥ k).
k=1

Hint: Express the right-hand side of the above formula as a double summation then inter­
change the order of the summations.
(b) Use the formula in the previous part to find the expectation of a random variable Y whose
PMF is defined as follows:
1
pY (y) = , y = a, a + 1, . . . , b
b−a+1
where a and b are nonnegative integers with b > a. Note that for y = a, a + 1, . . . , b, pY (y)
does not depend explicitly on y since it is a uniform PMF.
4. Two fair three-sided dice are rolled simultaneously. Let X be the difference of the two rolls.
(a) Calculate the PMF, the expected value, and the variance of X.
(b) Calculate and plot the PMF of X 2 .
5. Let n ≥ 2 be an integer. Show that
n
� �
� n
k(k − 1) = n(n − 1)2n−2 .
k=2
k

Hint: As one way of solving the problem, following from Example 1.31 in the text, think of a
committee that includes a chair and a vice-chair.

Page 1 of 2
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science
6.041/6.431: Probabilistic Systems Analysis
(Fall 2010)

G1† . A candy factory has an endless supply of red, orange, yellow, green, blue, black, white, and violet
jelly beans. The factory packages the jelly beans into jars in such a way that each jar has 200
beans, equal number of red and orange beans, equal number of yellow and green beans, one more
black bean than the number blue beans, and three more violet beans than the number of white
beans. One possible color distribution, for example, is a jar of 50 yellow, 50 green, one black,
48 white, and 51 violet jelly beans. As a marketing gimmick, the factory guarantees that no
two jars have the same color distribution. What is the maximum number of jars the factory can
produce?

† Required for 6.431; optional for 6.041 Page 2 of 2


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6.041SC Probabilistic Systems Analysis and Applied Probability


Fall 2013

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