Let there be a cube with n sides denoted 1 , . . . , n each. The cube is tossed

pokoljitef2

pokoljitef2

Answered question

2022-06-12

Let there be a cube with n sides denoted 1 , . . . , n each. The cube is tossed n + 1 times. For 1 k n what is the probability that exactly k first tosses give different number (i.e, the ( k + 1 )-st toss give a number that was already gotten.) I really need to know why I got a slightly different answer from the official one.My attempt: Let us build a uniform sample space. Ω = { a i = ( i 1 , . . . , i k ) | 1 i j n }. | Ω | = ( n + 1 ) n , ω Ω , P ( ω ) = 1 | Ω | . We seek for the event A = { ( i 1 , . . . , i k , i k + 1 , . . . , i n + 1 ) | i t i s , 1 t s k , k { i 1 , . . . , i k } } This is the problematic part: | A | = ( n k ) k ! k n n k 1 . (Then I and the answer use the formula for probability of an even it a uniform sample space.)The point is, the answer says: | A | = ( n k ) k ! k n n k I don't understand why; First I pick k numbers, count all their permutations, then pick one of them for the ( k + 1 )-th toss, and then I have n k 1 tosses left, each of which has n possibilities.

Answer & Explanation

Sage Mcdowell

Sage Mcdowell

Beginner2022-06-13Added 19 answers

After toss k+1, you have n-k tosses remaining. (Also, Ω = { ( i 1 , , i n + 1 ) | 1 i j n } so | Ω | = n n + 1 ).
The discrepancy is resolved by noting that the cube is cossed n+1 times, not n times.

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