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In-Class Exercise: The Poisson Distribution

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In-Class Exercise: The Poisson Distribution 3-105. The number of surface flaws in plastic panels used in the interior of automobiles has a Poisson distribution with a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: In-Class Exercise: The Poisson Distribution


1
In-Class Exercise The Poisson Distribution
  • 3-105. The number of surface flaws in plastic
    panels used in the interior of automobiles has a
    Poisson distribution with a man of 0.05 flaws per
    square foot of plastic panel. Assume an
    automobile interior contains 10 square feet of
    plastic panel.
  • What is the probability that there are no surface
    flaws in an autos interior?
  • If 10 cars are sold to a rental car company, what
    is the probability that none of the 10 cars has
    any surface flaws?
  • If 10 cars are sold to a rental car company, what
    is the probability that at most one car has any
    surface flaws?

2
Solution Part a
  • Let X be the number of surface flaws in a cars
    interior.
  • Since there are an average of 0.05 flaws per
    square foot and a car interior contains of 10
    square feet of the material, X is Poisson random
    variable with a mean of ? 0.5.

3
Solution Part b
  • Let Y be the number of surface flaws in a fleet
    of 10 cars.
  • Since there are an average of 0.05 flaws per
    square foot and one car interior contains of 10
    square feet of the material, Y is Poisson random
    variable with a mean of ? 5.

4
Solution Part b
  • Let Z be the number of cars that have surface
    flaws in a fleet of 10 cars.
  • In Part a we found that the probability that a
    car has no surface flaws is e-0.5.
  • Therefore, the probability that a car has any
    surface flaws is (1-e-0.5)
  • If we treat the fleet of cars as sequence of 10
    Bernoulli trials, then Z is a binomial random
    variable with n 10 and p (1-e-0.5).

5
Solution Part c
  • Let Z be the number of cars that have surface
    flaws in a fleet of 10 cars.
  • In part a we found that the probability that a
    car has no surface flaws is e-0.5.
  • Therefore, the probability that a car has any
    surface flaws is (1-e-0.5)
  • If we treat the fleet of cars as sequence of 10
    Bernoulli trials, then Z is a binomial random
    variable with n 10 and p (1-e-0.5).

6
Solution Part c
  • Notice that the random variable Y counts the
    number of surface flaws in 100 square feet of
    plastic panel.
  • This is equivalent to 10 car interiors, however
    the event that there are say 6 surface flaws in
    100 square feet of plastic panel can be realized
    in many different ways. For example
  • All 6 flaws are in the first 10 square feet
    (i.e., they are all in the first car)
  • 3 flaws are in the first 10 square feet, 2 flaws
    are in the second 10 square feet, and 1 is in the
    third 10 square feet (i.e., there are flaws in
    the first 3 cars).
  • While its true that P(Y 0) P(Z 0), it is
    not true that P(Y x) P(Z x) for x gt 0.
  • So, we must use the Binomial distribution for
    Part c.
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