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Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by Martinez39s(m): 12:16pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
dejt4u:Well, I am not deep into probability (and combinatorics.) I assumed the question solely had to deal with permutation. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by Mechanics96(m): 12:39pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
dejt4u: Exactly what I have solved here, *just added that the probability of having at least a pair of students whose birthday is the same will be: 1-0.0000003073 which is 0.99999... And that's approximately 1. So if we pick out a pair of students at random assuming that they are sure to share birthdays (probably 1) then we have 98 students left, out of which there may still be some pairs of same birthdays. There's got to be how to get a specific number of students who are likely not to share birthdays... Maybe someone can help figure this out. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by ifada123: 1:04pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
Martinez39s:To get the number of people you need to probability |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by ifada123: 1:06pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
Mechanics96: It has already been answers now. It is unlikely to find a student how do not share birth date |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 1:47pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
Martinez39s:Lmao. She used term expected number in a group of 100 which points towards probability. If you need to get the number out of 100,just multiply the answer by 100. E. G if you have (1/4) =0.25 as a probability which means 1 out of every 4. If you now want to get the 1,you will need to multiply 4 by 0.25.So,multiply 100 by the answer to get the figure. You won't still get up to even 1. What does that say? It means that the probability that no 2 persons will share same birthday out of the 100 is negligible. 1 Like |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by dejt4u(m): 1:50pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
naturalwaves:always proud of you. You're a good teacher. Keep it up bro! |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 1:53pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
Mechanics96: If the probability of having 2 students with the same birthday like you said is almost 1 which I agree with. THEN, the probability of not having 2 same birthdays will be extremely close to 0. Moreover,the fact that there are 100 physical students does not mean that to get the figure from the group, you must have a digit or something. Your probability can even tend far far towards 0. Check my solution on the previous page. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 1:55pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
dejt4u:Thanks bro. I do appreciate you very much as well. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 2:00pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
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Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 2:10pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
ifada123: The last number for the 100th was supposed to be 266 and not 265. Your solution is similar to mine just that you were rushing when solving. You were supposed to compute as (365!)/(265!*365100). |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by ifada123: 2:53pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
naturalwaves:I observed it It was supposed to be (1/365)^100 x356P100 1 Like |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by Mechanics96(m): 6:47pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
naturalwaves:. I saw your solution, I solved it same way too. Thanks for adding this � |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 7:28pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
Mechanics96:Great! |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by jackpot(f): 8:04pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
naturalwaves:I think that you are solving a different question The question says expected number of unshared birthdays among 100 students? |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 8:08pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot:The answer I got is the probability that there won't be an unshared birthday. Multiply the answer by 100 to get your answer. That's a negligible figure as it is far far less than 1. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by jackpot(f): 8:09pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot: Okay, for the first 100 players in the PDF whose link is shown, I found out that 15 share birthdays while 85 didn't share birthdays. However, this gives just an idea of the problem but is not the answer at all 1 Like |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 8:16pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot:The question is not as basic as you see. There is a large difference between 15 students sharing birthday and number of shared birthdays. 15 students can share just 1 birthday. 15 students can share 3 birthdays etc etc . How many birth days are shared in the document? |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by jackpot(f): 8:17pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
naturalwaves: I think that the answer you got is the probability of 100 persons having distinct birthdays. I don't think E=NP should work here. If you multiply by 100, it's still a negligible number and it will tend to invalidate your earlier probability (because I think that your probability answer is saying that it is almost impossible not to see a shared birthday among 100 persons). Check again. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 8:20pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot:No, my answer says it is almost impossible to see an unshared birthday which means that the probability of having a shared birthday is higher. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by jackpot(f): 8:24pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
naturalwaves:Sure. naturalwaves:From that data, 85 have distinct birthdays but 15 must have at least a birthday mate. Note that as you noticed, this is different from saying that 15 share the same birthday. naturalwaves:A lot. I just considered the first 100 so that I will not deviate from the question. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 8:26pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot:You've not answered my question. From the 15 people with shared birthdays, how many birthdays are shared 15 people can share just 1 birthday. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 8:32pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot:You should also be careful not to confuse "unshared birthdays" with "number of students with unshared birthdays" The question requires the former. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by jackpot(f): 8:39pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
naturalwaves:Okay, but if you multiply your answer with 100, you will get 0.000030725. Is that the expected number? That answer is almost zero na |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by jackpot(f): 8:43pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
naturalwaves:the birthdays belong to somebody na What's the difference? |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by Mrshape: 9:05pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot:He did the correct thing sis |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by Martinez39s(m): 9:12pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot:I said it, but others were telling me I need probability. Naturalwaves found the probability of selecting a group of 100 in which at least two share a birthday assuming we have 365 days in a year. His solution doesn't make sense because number of birthdays can't be a decimal, neither can it be a probability. Nevertheless, I am yet to understand your question. •• If you are looking for the number of possible ways in which no two people in a group of 100 share the same birthday (assuming we have 365 days in a year) then your answer is 365P265 = 365!/265! •• If you seek the number of possible ways in which at least two people in a group of 100 share the same birthday (assuming we have 365 days in a year) then your answer is 365100 – (365P265) = 365100 – 365!/265! I repeat, I still don't understand your question except I presume what you could possibly mean. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by jackpot(f): 9:16pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
Mrshape:His answer is correct but I think it is not the direct answer to the question I posed. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by jackpot(f): 9:20pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
Martinez39s: You have 100 students only in a class. What is the expected number of students in the class that do not have birthday mates? |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 9:25pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot:This is the difference. 20 students can have shared birthdays but Shared birthdays can be just 1 if the 20 were born on exactly same day. 20 students can even have 3 shared birthdays if for example 4 of them have same day, 13 have another day and 3 have another day. That still gives 20 students with a shared birthday but only 3 shared birthdays. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by jackpot(f): 9:26pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
naturalwaves:Among the 15 players, 6 pairs of players shared 6 different birthdays while 3 players shared the same birthday. So, 6×2+3=15. The rest 85 players do not have birthday mates. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by naturalwaves: 9:28pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot:That means that 15 players share birthdays but only 13 birthdays are shared. |
Re: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by Mrshape: 9:30pm On Apr 30, 2020 |
jackpot:I know you were excepting an whole number but unfortunately it is almost impossible for 1out of 100 people not to share birth date. Check Wikipedia birth date paradox they are constant values |
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