At a manufacturing plant where switches are made, it is a known fact that 2% of all switches are defective. If two switches are used in a device, what is the probability that exactly one switch is good?

Respuesta :

Answer:

The probability that exactly one switch is good is

[tex]P(x) =0.0392[/tex]

Step-by-step explanation:

The probability that a switch is defective is:

[tex]P(D) = \frac{2}{100} =0.02[/tex]

The probability that a switch is not defective is

[tex]P(D') = 1-P(D)=0.98[/tex]

Therefore, if two switches are selected, the probability that exactly 1 is good is:

[tex]P(1=1)=P (D) P (D ') + P (D') P (D)[/tex]

[tex]P(x)=(0.02)(0.98) + (0.98)(0.02)[/tex]

[tex]P(x) =0.0392[/tex]

Answer:

P (exactly one good switch) = 0.0392

Step-by-step explanation:

We know that 2% of all switches are defective.

P (defective) = [tex]\frac{2}{100} =0.02[/tex]

So P (not defective) = 1 - P (defective) = [tex]1-0.02=0.98[/tex]

Now we have to find the probability of one good switch out of 2 that are used in a device.

P (exactly one good switch) = [tex] (0.02 \times 0.95) + (0.02 \times 0.95) [/tex] = 0.0392

ACCESS MORE