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18 September, 21:53

Consider a post office with two clerks. Three people, A, B, and C, enter simultaneously. A and B go directly to the clerks, and C waits until either A or B leaves before he begins service. What is the probability that A is still in the post office after the other two have left when

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  1. 19 September, 00:12
    0
    A) 0

    B) 1/27

    C) 1/4

    Step-by-step explanation:

    Probability is defined as the ratio of the number of favorable outcomes to the total number of possible outcomes. The formular is represented below:

    P (A) = Number of Favorable Outcomes / Total Number of Possible Outcomes

    Let S1, S2, S3 represent the service times for A, B and C respectively

    a) PS1 > S2 + S3 = 0

    Thus there is no probability that A is still in the office after the other two have left. The probability is 0.

    b) Let

    θ

    θ be the possible values S1, S2, S3 then

    S1 > S2 + S3



    ⇔ S1 = 3, S2 = 1, S3 = 1

    P (S1 > S2 + S3) = P (S1=3) P (S2=1) P (S3=1)



    ⇔ 1/3 x 1/3 x 1/3 = 1/27

    (c) P (X >Y) = 1/2 where X, Y belongs { A, B, C}

    where A, B, C represents the waiting times of clients A, B, C respectively. Now due to the memoryless property of exponential distribution. we have that

    P (A>B+C)

    =P (A>B+C/A>B) P (A>B)

    =P (A>C) P (A>B)

    =1/2X1/2

    =1/4
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