Revision as of 00:59, 26 June 2024 by Admin
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
ABy Admin
Jun 24'24

Exercise

An airline finds that 4 percent of the passengers that make reservations on a particular flight will not show up. Consequently, their policy is to sell 100 reserved seats on a plane that has only 98 seats. Find the probability that every person who shows up for the flight will find a seat available.

  • 0.81
  • 0.85
  • 0.88
  • 0.91
  • 0.94

References

Doyle, Peter G. (2006). "Grinstead and Snell's Introduction to Probability" (PDF). Retrieved June 6, 2024.

ABy Admin
Jun 26'24

Solution: D

The number of persons that show up for the flight equals [math]N[/math] and has a binomial distribution with [math]n=100, p = 0.96 [/math] and we are interested in the probability that [math]N \leq 98 [/math]. This equals

[[math]] 1-P(N=99)-P(N=100) = 1- 100 \cdot 0.96^{99} \cdot 0.04 - 0.96^{100} = 0.9128. [[/math]]

00