Respuesta :
The probability that a student chosen at random has a cat and a dog is [tex]\frac{9}{25}[/tex]
Step-by-step explanation:
The addition rules of probability are:
- P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) ⇒ mutually exclusive (events cannot happen at the same time)
- P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A and B) ⇒ non-mutually exclusive (if they have at least one outcome in common)
The rule of probability is P(A) = [tex]\frac{n(A)}{n}[/tex]
∵ A class has 25 students
∵ 15 of them have a cat
∴ n(cat) = 15
- By using the rule of probability
∴ P(cat) = [tex]\frac{15}{25}[/tex]
∵ 16 of them have a dog
∴ n(dog) = 16
- By using the rule of probability
∴ P(dog) = [tex]\frac{16}{25}[/tex]
∵ 3 of them have neither
- Subtract from the total of the class to find the number of
students that have a cat or a dog
∴ n(cat or dog) = 25 - 3
∴ n(cat or dog) = 22
- By using the rule of probability
∴ P(cat or dog) = [tex]\frac{22}{25}[/tex]
To find the probability that a student has a cat and a dog use the non-mutually rule of addition above
∵ P(cat or dog) = P(cat) + P(dog) - P(cat and dog)
∴ [tex]\frac{22}{25}[/tex] = [tex]\frac{15}{25}[/tex] + [tex]\frac{16}{25}[/tex] - P(cat and dog)
- Add the like terms in the right hand side
∴ [tex]\frac{22}{25}[/tex] = [tex]\frac{31}{25}[/tex] - P(cat and dog)
- Subtract [tex]\frac{31}{25}[/tex] from both sides
∴ [tex]-\frac{9}{25}[/tex] = - P(cat and dog)
- Multiply both sides by -1
∴ [tex]\frac{9}{25}[/tex] = P(cat and dog)
- Switch the two sides
∴ P(cat and dog) = [tex]\frac{9}{25}[/tex]
The probability that a student chosen at random has a cat and a dog is [tex]\frac{9}{25}[/tex]
Learn more:
You can learn more about probability in brainly.com/question/9178881
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