The Poisson Distribution: (Not in Reif's Book)
The Poisson Distribution: (Not in Reif's Book)
Limiting case of the Binomial When the Chance of Success Tends to Zero.
Limiting case of the Binomial When the Chance of Success Tends to Zero.
Poisson Distribution: An approximation to binomial distribution for the SPECIAL CASE when the average number (mean ) of successes is very much smaller than the possible number n. i.e. << n because p << 1.
This distribution is important for the study of such phenomena as radioactive decay. This distribution is NOT necessarily symmetric! Data are usually bounded on one side & not the other.
= 10.0 = 3.16
p( X k )
k e
The Poisson parameter can be given as the mean number of events that occur in a defined time period OR, equivalently, can be given as a rate, such as = 2 events per month. must often be multiplied by a time t in a physical process
( t ) e P( X k ) k!
k
= t
= t
Example
1. If calls to your cell phone are a Poisson process with a
constant rate = 2 calls per hour, what is the probability that, if you forget to turn your phone off in a 1.5 hour class, your phone rings during that time?
P(X 1) = 1 P(X = 0)
(2 * 1.5) 0 e 2 (1.5) (3) 0 e 3 P( X 0) e 3 .05 0! 0!
P(X 1) = 1 .05 = 95% chance 2. How many phone calls do you expect to get during the class?
<X> = t = 2(1.5) = 3
Editorial comment: The students & the instructor in the class will not be very happy with you!!
Conditions Required
for the
Example
A production line produces 600 parts per hour with an average of 5 defective parts an hour. If you test every part that comes off the line in 15 minutes, what is the probability of finding no defective parts
(and incorrectly concluding that your process is perfect)? = (5 defects/hour)*(0.25 hour) = 1.25 p(x) = (xe-)/(x!) x = given number of defects P(x = 0) = (1.25)0e-1.25)/(0!) = e-1.25 = 0.287
= 28.7%
with Mean = 1
0.5 0.4
0.4 0.35
Probability
Probability
2 m
Poisson Distribution: As (Average # Counts) gets large, this also approaches a Gaussian =5 = 15
= 25
= 35