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IE202 Engineering Statistics 2012 Spring Homework1 SOLN PDF
IE202 Engineering Statistics 2012 Spring Homework1 SOLN PDF
1. A part selected for testing is equally likely to have been produced on any one of six cutting tools.
Solution:
2. The following circuits operate if and only if there is a path of functional devices from left to right. The
probability each device functions is as shown. Assume that the probability that a device functions does
not depend on whether or not other devices are functional. What is the probability that the circuit
operates?
(a) Circuit 1
1
(c) Circuit 3
0.9
0.95
0.9 0.99
0.95
0.9
Solution:
(a) For each part of this loop, the probability that it functions is 1 minus the probability that both
elements fail:
3. Disks of polycarbonate plastic from a supplier are analyzed for scratch and shock resistance. The results
from 100 disks are summarized as follows:
Shock Resistance
high low
scratch resistance high 70 9
low 16 5
(a) If a disk is selected at random, what is the probability that its scratch resistance is high and its
shock resistance is high?
2
(b) If a disk is selected at random, what is the probability that its scratch resistance is high or its
shock resistance is high?
Solution:
(a) If a disk is selected at random, what is the probability that its scratch resistance is high and its
shock resistance is high?
70 70
= = 0.7
70 + 9 + 16 + 5 70 + 9 + 16 + 5
(b) If a disk is selected at random, what is the probability that its scratch resistance is high or its
shock resistance is high?
70 + 9 + 16 95
= = 0.95
70 + 9 + 16 + 5 100
4. For the data above in the previous question, let A denote the event that a disk has high shock resistance,
and let B denote the event that a disk has high scratch resistance.
Determine the following probabilities:
(a) P (A)
(b) P (B)
(c) P (A|B)
(d) P (B|A)
Solution:
70+16
(a) P (A) = 100 = 0.86
70+9
(b) P (B) = 100 = 0.79
(c) P (A|B) = PP(AB) 70
(B) = 79 = 0.88607
(d) P (B|A) = PP(AB) 70
(A) = 86 = 0.81395
5. The edge roughness of slit paper products increases as knife blades wear. Only 1% of products slit with
new blades have rough edges, 3% of products slit with blades of average sharpness exhibit roughness,
and 5% of products slit with worn blades exhibit roughness. If 25% of the blades in manufacturing are
new, 60% are of average sharpness, and 15% are worn, what is the probability that a randomly selected
product has rough edges?
Solution:
N = cut by new blade
V = cut by average blade
W = cut by worn blade
R = product has rough edges
P r(R|N ) = 0.01
P r(R|V ) = 0.03
P r(R|W ) = 0.05
P r(N ) = 0.25
P r(V ) = 0.60
P r(W ) = 0.15
P r(R) = P r(R|N )P r(N ) + P r(R|V )P r(V ) + P r(R|W )P r(W )
= 0.01 × 0.25 + 0.03 × 0.60 + 0.05 × 0.15 = 0.0280
3
6. A lot of 100 semiconductor chips contains 20 that are defective.
(a) Two are selected, at random, without replacement, from the lot. Determine the probability that
the second chip selected is defective.
(b) Three are selected, at random, without replacement, from the lot. Determine the probability that
all are defective.
Solution:
(a) Two are selected, at random, without replacement, from the lot. Determine the probability that
the second chip selected is defective.
(b) Three are selected, at random, without replacement, from the lot. Determine the probability that
all are defective.
20 19 18
P r(3 are all defective) = × × = 0.00704
100 99 98
7. The British government wants to give information to farmers about “foot and mouth disease” by mailing
brochures to farmers around the country. It is estimated that 99% of farmers who receive the brochure
will have enough information to deal with the disease, but only 90% of the farmers who don’t get the
brochure will have enough information to deal with the disease. After the first 3 months of mailing,
95% of farmers received the informative brochure. Compute the probability that a randomly selected
farmer will be able to deal with the disease.
Solution:
D = can deal with disease
P = received pamphlet
P r(D|P ) = 0.99
P r (D|P c ) = 0.90
P r(P ) = 0.95
8. An e-mail message can travel through one of two routes to the server. The probability of transmission
error in each of the servers and the proportion of messages that travel each route are shown in the
following table. Assume that the servers are independent.
probability of error
percentage of messages server 1 server 2 server 3 server 4
route 1 30 0.01 0.015
route 2 70 0.02 0.003
(a) What is the probability that a message will arrive without error?
4
(b) If a message arrives in error, what is the probability it was sent through route 1?
Solution:
(a) What is the probability that a message will arrive without error?
P r(route 1) = 0.3
P r(route 2) = 0.7
P r(error|route 1) = (1 − 0.01)(1 − 0.015) = 0.97515
P r(error|route 2) = (1 − 0.02)(1 − 0.003) = 0.97706
P r(error) = P r(error|route 1)P r(route 1) + P r(error|route 2)P r(route 2)
= 0.97515 × 0.3 + 0.97706 × 0.7 = 0.97648
(b) If a message arrives in error, what is the probability it was sent through route 1?
P r(error|route1)P r(route1)
P r(route 1|error) =
P r(error)
0.97515 × 0.3
=
0.97515 × 0.3 + 0.97706 × 0.7
0.97515 × 0.3
= = 0.29958
0.97648