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Tutorial 3 Min

1. The document discusses discrete random variables through examples including: the number of transmission attempts needed for a call to connect, the probability of buying lottery tickets and winning on a given day, the amount of money won or lost in a casino gambling game, the number of miles run in a single day when there is a probability of quitting after each mile, and properties of binomial and Poisson distributions. 2. Specific questions addressed include: finding the probability mass function (PMF) of the number of call setup attempts, the probability of buying a lottery ticket on a given day and whether it is a winner or loser, the distribution of money won in the casino gambling game, the PMF of miles run in a single day
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
147 views

Tutorial 3 Min

1. The document discusses discrete random variables through examples including: the number of transmission attempts needed for a call to connect, the probability of buying lottery tickets and winning on a given day, the amount of money won or lost in a casino gambling game, the number of miles run in a single day when there is a probability of quitting after each mile, and properties of binomial and Poisson distributions. 2. Specific questions addressed include: finding the probability mass function (PMF) of the number of call setup attempts, the probability of buying a lottery ticket on a given day and whether it is a winner or loser, the distribution of money won in the casino gambling game, the PMF of miles run in a single day
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Tutorial​ ​3

Discrete Random Variables

1.​ When someone presses “SEND” on a cellular phone, the phone attempts to set up a call by
transmitting a “SETUP” message to a nearby base station. The phone waits for a response and
if none arrives within 0.5 seconds it tries again. If it doesn’t get a response after n = 6 tries the
phone stops transmitting messages and generates a busy signal.
(a) Draw a tree diagram that describes the call setup procedure.
(b) If all transmissions are independent and the probability is p that a “SETUP” message will get
through, what is the PMF of K, the number of messages transmitted in a call attempt?
(c) What is the probability that the phone will generate a busy signal?
(d) As manager of a cellular phone system, you want the probability of a busy signal to be less
than 0.02 If p = 0.9, what is the minimum value of n necessary to achieve your goal?

2.​ Suppose each day (starting on day 1) you buy one lottery ticket with probability 1/2;
otherwise, you buy no tickets. A ticket is a winner with probability p independent of the outcome
of all other tickets. Let Ni be the event that on day i you do not buy a ticket. Let Wi be the event
that on day i, you buy a winning ticket. Let Li be the event that on day i you buy a losing ticket.
(a) What are P[ W 33 ], P[ L87 ], and P[ N 99 ]?
(b) Let K be the number of the day on which you buy your first lottery ticket. Find the PMF K k (k)
(c) Find the PMF of R, the number of losing lottery tickets you have purchased in m days.
(d) Let D be the number of the day on which you buy your jth losing ticket. What is P D (d)? Hint:
If you buy your jth losing ticket on day d, how many losers did you have after d − 1 days?

3.​ Suppose you go to a casino with exactly $63. At this casino, the only game is roulette and the
only bets allowed are red and green. In addition, the wheel is fair so that P[red] = P[green] = 1/2.
You have the following strategy: First, you bet $1. If you win the bet, you quit and leave the
casino with $64. If you lose, you then bet $2. If you win, you quit and go home. If you lose, you
bet $4. In fact, whenever you lose, you double your bet until either you win a bet or you lose all
of your money. However, as soon as you win a bet, you quit and go home. Let Y equal the
amount of money that you take home. Find P Y (y) and E[Y]. Would you like to play this game
every day?

4.​ Prove that if X is a nonnegative integer-valued random variable, then

5.​ Every day you consider going jogging. Before each mile, including the first, you will quit with
probability q, independent of the number of miles you have already run. However, you are
sufficiently decisive that you never run a fraction of a mile. Also, we say you have run a
marathon whenever you run at least 26 miles.
(a) Let M equal the number of miles that you run on an arbitrary day. What is P[M > 0]? Find
the PMF P M (m).
(b) Let r be the probability that you run a marathon on an arbitrary day. Find r.
(c) Let J be the number of days in one year (not a leap year) in which you run a marathon. Find
the PMF P J (j). This answer may be expressed in terms of r found in part (b).
(d) Define K = M − 26. Let A be the event that you have run a marathon. Find P k|A (k).

6.​ Let random variable X have PMF PX (x). We wish to guess the value of X before performing
the actual experiment. If we call our guess xˆ, the expected square of the error in our guess is

Show that e(xˆ) is minimized by xˆ = E[X].

7. ​The binomial random variable X has PMF

find PX|B(x), where the condition B = {X ≥ μX }. What are E[X|B] and Var[X|B]?

8.​ Random variable K has a Poisson (α) distribution. Derive the properties E[K] = Var[K] = α.
Hint​: E[K2] = E[K(K − 1)] + E[K].

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