SOLUTION: A committee of four people is to be selected from six Democrats and four Republicans. What is the probability that all are Democrats?
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Question 426302: A committee of four people is to be selected from six Democrats and four Republicans. What is the probability that all are Democrats? Answer by solver91311(24713) (Show Source):
If you consider chosing a Democrat for any one of the positions as a success (nothing to do with politics, it is simply a way of looking at the problem), then you want the probability of 4 successes in 4 trials where the probability of success on any given trial is 0.6. I say 0.6 because there are 10 people to choose from and 6 are considered a success.
Alternatively, if your conservative politics simply won't allow you to consider selecting a Democrat as a success, you could calculate the probability of 4 failures (failure to pick a Republican) in 4 trials where the probability of success is 0.4. You will find that it reduces to the exact same calculation.
The probability of successes in trials where is the probability of success on any given trial is given by:
Where is the number of combinations of things taken at a time and is calculated by
So, for this problem you could either compute:
or
And remembering that and ,
So either way, it reduces to
You can do your own arithmetic.
John
My calculator said it, I believe it, that settles it