A bag contains 9 blue balls and 3 red balls - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Statistics - Question 4 - 2006 - Paper 1
Question 4
A bag contains 9 blue balls and 3 red balls. A ball is selected at random from the bag and its colour is recorded. The ball is not replaced. A second ball is selecte... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:A bag contains 9 blue balls and 3 red balls - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Statistics - Question 4 - 2006 - Paper 1
Step 1
Draw a tree diagram to represent the information.
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Answer
To represent the information, we construct a tree diagram.
Start with a single point representing the selection of the first ball.
From this point, branch out to two outcomes: selecting a blue ball or selecting a red ball.
Probability of selecting a blue ball: ( P(Blue) = \frac{9}{12} = \frac{3}{4} )
Probability of selecting a red ball: ( P(Red) = \frac{3}{12} = \frac{1}{4} )
From each of these outcomes, draw branches for the selection of the second ball, noting that the total number of balls now changes:
If the first ball was blue (9 blue - 1 = 8 blue, still 3 red):
Probability of selecting blue second: ( P(Blue|First Blue) = \frac{8}{11} )
Probability of selecting red second: ( P(Red|First Blue) = \frac{3}{11} )
If the first ball was red (3 red - 1 = 2 red, still 9 blue):
Probability of selecting blue second: ( P(Blue|First Red) = \frac{9}{11} )
Probability of selecting red second: ( P(Red|First Red) = \frac{2}{11} )
The completed tree shows all possible outcomes with their probabilities.
Step 2
the second ball selected is red.
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Answer
To find the probability that the second ball selected is red, we consider both paths that lead to selecting a red ball second:
If the first ball is blue:
Probability of first selecting blue and then red is:
[ P(Blue, Red) = P(Blue) \times P(Red|First Blue) = \frac{9}{12} \times \frac{3}{11} = \frac{27}{132} ]
If the first ball is red:
Probability of first selecting red and then red is:
[ P(Red, Red) = P(Red) \times P(Red|First Red) = \frac{3}{12} \times \frac{2}{11} = \frac{6}{132} ]
Now, sum both probabilities for the event that the second ball is red:
[ P(Second\ is\ Red) = P(Blue, Red) + P(Red, Red) = \frac{27}{132} + \frac{6}{132} = \frac{33}{132} = \frac{1}{4} ]
Step 3
both balls selected are red, given that the second ball selected is red.
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Answer
To find the conditional probability that both drawn balls are red given that the second ball is red, we use: