If X follows a geometric distribution, where p= probability of success and q= probability of failure, why is P(X>r)=qr?

ferdysy9

ferdysy9

Open question

2022-08-16

Why is P ( X > r ) = q r ?
If X follows a geometric distribution, where p = probability of success and q = probability of failure, why is P ( X > r ) = q r ?

Answer & Explanation

stangeix

stangeix

Beginner2022-08-17Added 10 answers

Step 1
Because it means that you have failed for at least the first r times.
Since the only sequence that has this outcome is the one when you always fail, and you fail r times with probability q, you have P ( X > r ) = q r .
Step 2
Let's compute P ( X = r + 1 ) + + P ( X = n )
We have p q r + + p q n 1 = p q r ( 1 + + q n r 1 ) = ( 1 q ) q r q n r 1 q 1 = q r ( 1 q n r ) = q r q n
Now letting n you can see that q n 0, so P ( X > r ) = lim n P ( X = r + 1 ) + + P ( X = n ) = lim n q r q n = q r

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

New Questions in High school geometry

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?