Let X∼‬G(p_1), Y∼‬G(p_2), X and Y are independent. Prove that the minimum is also geometric, meaning: min(X,Y)∼G(1-(1-p_1)(1-p_2)).

Haiden Meyer

Haiden Meyer

Answered question

2022-10-03

The minimum of two independent geometric random variables
Let X G ( p 1 ), Y G ( p 2 ), X and Y are independent. Prove that the minimum is also geometric, meaning: min ( X , Y ) G ( 1 ( 1 p 1 ) ( 1 p 2 ) ).
Instructions: first calculate the probability P ( min ( X , Y ) > k ) and compare it to the parallel probability in (of?) a geometric random variable.

Answer & Explanation

antidootnw

antidootnw

Beginner2022-10-04Added 10 answers

Step 1
Let X and Y be independent random variables having geometric distributions with probability parameters p 1 and p 2 respectively. Then if Z is the random variable min(X,Y) then Z has a geometric distribution with probability parameter 1 ( 1 p 1 ) ( 1 p 2 ).
There are essentially two ways to see this:
First, the method outlined by the hint in your homework - Note that the cdf of X is 1 ( 1 p 1 ) k and the cdf of Y is 1 ( 1 p 2 ) k , so the probability that X > k is ( 1 p 1 ) k and the probability that Y > k is ( 1 p 2 ) k and so the probability that both are greater than k is [ ( 1 p 1 ) ( 1 p 2 ) ] k . But the probability that both are greater than k is the same as the probability that the minimum of the two is greater than k. From this we can get the cdf of Z as 1 [ ( 1 p 1 ) ( 1 p 2 ) ] k , and we can note that this is the cdf of a geometric random variable with probability parameter 1 ( 1 p 1 ) ( 1 p 2 ).
Step 2
Second, and more intuitively to me, we can go back to the definition of a geometric random variable with probability parameter p : the number of Bernoulli trials with probability p needed to get one success. So min(X,Y) is the number of trials of simultaneously running a Bernoulli experiment with probability p 1 and one with probability p 2 before one or the other experiments succeeds. The probability of one of the two experiments succeeding at any step is just 1 ( 1 p 1 ) ( 1 p 2 ), so Z is a geometric random variable with probability parameter 1 ( 1 p 1 ) ( 1 p 2 )

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