SOLUTION: You have 5 keys on a key ring, 2 of the keys unlock the door. Find the
probability of opening the door on the first or second try. Draw a tree diagram
to illustrate.
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-> SOLUTION: You have 5 keys on a key ring, 2 of the keys unlock the door. Find the
probability of opening the door on the first or second try. Draw a tree diagram
to illustrate.
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Question 347965: You have 5 keys on a key ring, 2 of the keys unlock the door. Find the
probability of opening the door on the first or second try. Draw a tree diagram
to illustrate. Answer by Edwin McCravy(20060) (Show Source):
You can put this solution on YOUR website! You have 5 keys on a key ring, 2 of the keys unlock the door. Find the
probability of opening the door on the first or second try. Draw a tree diagram
to illustrate.
Answer: We add the two probabilities of successes
2/5 + 3/10 in red above.
2/5 + 3/10 = 4/10 + 3/10 = 7/10
Or we could subtract the probability of two wrong keys 3/10 from 1
and get 1 - 3/10 = 7/10.
Explanation: The upper left branch represents picking a right key
the first time with a probability of 2 right keys out of 5, or 2/5.
That led to a success (opening the door). So we write 2/5 on the
branch that leads to that, and we do not branch from because we
open the door.
The lower left branch represents picking a wrong key the first time
with a probability of 3 wrong keys out of 5, or 3/5. So we write
3/5 on the lower left branch. So we must branch again from there.
There are two possibilities for the second key we try. We have
eliminated 1 wrong key, so we only have 4 keys to try, 2 are wrong
keys, and 2 are right keys. So it's a probability of 2 right keys
out of 4 for picking the right key the second time and also a 2
wrong keys out of 4 for picking the wrong key the second time. That's
why I wrote 2/4 instead of reducing it to 1/2.
Edwin