% Sample Question document for STA256 \documentclass[12pt]{article} %\usepackage{amsbsy} % for \boldsymbol and \pmb %\usepackage{graphicx} % To include pdf files! \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage[colorlinks=true, pdfstartview=FitV, linkcolor=blue, citecolor=blue, urlcolor=blue]{hyperref} % For links \usepackage{fullpage} %\pagestyle{empty} % No page numbers \begin{document} %\enlargethispage*{1000 pt} \begin{center} {\Large \textbf{Sample Questions: Independence}} STA256 Fall 2018. Copyright information is at the end of the last page. \vspace{1 mm} \end{center} \vspace{5mm} \begin{enumerate} \item A jar contains 5 red balls and 15 black balls. Draw 2 balls randomly with replacement. \begin{enumerate} \item What is the probability that the first ball is red and the second is black? The answer is a number. \vspace{85mm} \item What is the probability of one red and one black in any order? The answer is a number. \end{enumerate} \pagebreak %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \item Roll a fair die $n$ times. \begin{enumerate} \item What is the probability of observing at least one 4? \vspace{85mm} \item How many times must you roll the die for the probability of at least one 4 to be 0.90 or more? The answer is a number. \end{enumerate} \pagebreak %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \item A biased coin has $P(\mbox{Head}) = p$. Toss it three times. \begin{enumerate} \item List the elements of the sample space, along with their probabilities. \vspace{70mm} \item What is $P(\mbox{Two Heads})$? \vspace{20mm} \end{enumerate} \item It is clear from the last problem that the probability of a string with $k$ heads is the same, regardless of their placement. Suppose we toss the biased coin $n$ times. What is the probability of $k$ heads (for $k = 0, \ldots, n$)? \pagebreak %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \item Again, a biased coin has $P(\mbox{Head}) = p$. Toss it until the first head occurs, and then stop. \begin{enumerate} \item What is the probability that the first head appears on the fifth toss? \vspace{30mm} \item What is the probability that a head eventually occurs (on toss 1 or 2 or \ldots)? \pagebreak \item What is the probability that the first head occurs on an even numbered toss \linebreak (toss 2 or 4 or \ldots)? \end{enumerate} \end{enumerate} \vspace{160mm} \noindent \begin{center}\begin{tabular}{l} \hspace{6in} \\ \hline \end{tabular}\end{center} This assignment was prepared by \href{http://www.utstat.toronto.edu/~brunner}{Jerry Brunner}, Department of Mathematical and Computational Sciences, University of Toronto. It is licensed under a \href{http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US} {Creative Commons Attribution - ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License}. Use any part of it as you like and share the result freely. The \LaTeX~source code is available from the course website: \begin{center} \href{http://www.utstat.toronto.edu/~brunner/oldclass/256f18} {\small\texttt{http://www.utstat.toronto.edu/$^\sim$brunner/oldclass/256f18}} \end{center} \end{document} % The answer is a number. Circle your answer.