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12 February, 03:12

There are 52 cards in a deck, and 13 of them are hearts. Consider the following two scenarios:

Scenario A: Four cards are dealt, one at a time, off the top of a well-shuffled deck. What is the probability that a heart turns up on the fourth card, but not before?

Scenario B: A deck of cards is shuffled. You have to deal one card at a time until a heart turns up. You have dealt 3 cards, and still have not seen a heart. What is the probability of getting a heart on the 4th card?

Calculate the probabilities of the two scenarios and show your work. Are the two scenarios different? Explain.

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  1. 12 February, 05:57
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    The two scenarios differ.

    P (Scenario A) = 0.107

    P (Scenario B) = 0.265

    Step-by-step explanation:

    The two scenarios are different because for the second one you are alredy assuming that the first 3 cards are not hearths, and for that reason, B is more likely to happen that A.

    For B to happen, you need to notice that since you remove 3 cards from your deck that are not hearts, then your deck has only 49 cards, and 13 of them are hearts. The probability for a heart to show up is, as a result 13/49 = 0.265 because you have 13 favourable cases from 49 possible.

    For A, you need the first card to be anything but a heart. Since 13 cards of the deck are herts, 39 are not, and the probability of that hapening is 39/52 = 3/4. After you remove your first card, the probability of the second one not being heart is 38/51, and the probability for the third one is 37/50 (you are removing one favourable case and one case for the total of cases each time). The probability for the fourth card being a heart assuming that the first three are not was calculated before and it gives us a result of 13/49.

    Multiplying everything, we obtain that

    P (A) = 3/4*38/51*37/50*13/49 = 0.107.
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