In an experiment a group of children each repeatedly throw a dart at a target - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Statistics - Question 3 - 2018 - Paper 2
Question 3
In an experiment a group of children each repeatedly throw a dart at a target.
For each child, the random variable H represents the number of times the dart hits th... show full transcript
Worked Solution & Example Answer:In an experiment a group of children each repeatedly throw a dart at a target - Edexcel - A-Level Maths Statistics - Question 3 - 2018 - Paper 2
Step 1
State two assumptions Peta needs to make to use her model.
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Answer
The probability of a dart hitting the target is constant (fixed) for each throw by each child.
The throws of each of the darts are independent.
Step 2
Using Peta's model, find P(H > 4).
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Answer
Using the complement rule:
P(H>4)=1−P(Hleq4)
Calculating P(H ≤ 4) using the binomial distribution:
P(H=k)=(kn)pk(1−p)n−k
we sum for k = 0, 1, 2, 3, 4:
P(Hleq4)=∑k=04(k10)(0.1)k(0.9)10−k
After calculations, we find:
P(H>4)=1−0.9872=0.0128.
Step 3
find P(F = 5)
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Answer
Given P(F = n) = 0.01 × (1 - 0.1)^{n-1} for the first hit,
We substitute n = 5:
P(F=5)=0.01⋅(0.9)4=0.01⋅0.6561=0.006561.
Thus, P(F = 5) is approximately 0.656.
Step 4
Find the value of α.
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To find α, we can sum the probabilities for n = 1 to 10:
∑n=110P(F=n)=1.
The equation becomes:
0.01+9α=1Rightarrow9α=0.99Rightarrowα=0.11.
Step 5
Using Thomas' model, find P(F = 5).
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Using Thomas' model:
P(F=5)=0.01+(5−1)⋅0.11=0.01+0.44=0.45.
Thus, P(F = 5) using Thomas' model is 0.45.
Step 6
Explain how Peta's and Thomas' models differ in describing the probability that a dart hits the target in this experiment.
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Peta's model assumes that the probability of hitting the target is constant for each throw, while Thomas' model assumes that the probability may increase with each attempt. Essentially, Peta treats each throw independently, whereas Thomas incorporates a learning aspect, suggesting that children improve with repeated attempts.