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Probability question (1 Viewer)

*girl04*

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Hi could anyone tell me how to approach this problem ( please). I tried a tree-diagram but it got messy.
question
A game of poker uses a deck of 52 cards with 4 suits. Each suit has 4 cards ( ace, 2-10, queen, king and jack) If a person is dealt 5 cards find the probability of getting
* 4 aces
* a flush ( all cards of the same suit)
Btw the answers are 1/54145 and 33/16660 thanks!
 

Jago

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each suit has 4 cards??? nevertheless...

4 aces - (4/52) x (3/51) x (2/50) x (1/49) x 5

flush - 1 x (12/51) x (11/50) x (10/49) x (9/48)
 

*girl04*

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Jago said:
each suit has 4 cards??? nevertheless...

4 aces - (4/52) x (3/51) x (2/50) x (1/49) x 5

flush - 1 x (12/51) x (11/50) x (10/49) x (9/48)
thanks for your quick response!
With the 1st answer why did you times it by 5? and not do that with the 2nd one?
thanks
 

Jago

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i did it becuase of 5C4 (3u method), but im not too sure how to explain it to you. Maybe someone else can give you a more literate response, but in 1 you need 4 distinct cards whereas in 2 you needed 5.
 

rukie

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ok i think this is an easier method,

so the combination has to be A A A A ?, coz 4 cards are used ? has 48 possibilities
so there the possibilities to get 4 aces, just divide that by total number of possiblities (52C5). think that gives you the right answer

48/52C5 = 1/54145
 
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nit

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Similarly for the last question, the easy method is p= 4*(13C5)/52C5

Each suit comprises 13 cards, from which you desire 5, and there are 4 suits. The probability is given by dividing through by the total number of choices of 5 cards from 52.
 

word.

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The 4-aces is a 3u probability question and aren't asked in the mathematics exam..


You can always work towards the binomial probability taught in 3u from mathematics level anyway:

A = ace, O = other
you can either get AAAAO, AAAOA, AAOAA, AOAAA and OAAAA...

so with 5 combinations:

P(4 aces) = {(4/52) * (3/51) * (2/50) * (1/49) * (48/48)} + {(4/52) * (3/51) * (2/50) * (48/49) * (1/48)} + ...

at this point, better 2u students should see the pattern:
the probability of getting 4 aces in the 1st order is the same as the 2nd..
and as there are 5 orders it can be achieved, just take the first order and multiply by 5.

either that or they can just keep going for all the orders
 

DraconisV

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Is all of this probablity with this C5 thingies HSC work, coz i didnt do probability as a topic in 2 unit or ext 1 in the prelim
 

acmilan

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DraconisV said:
Is all of this probablity with this C5 thingies HSC work, coz i didnt do probability as a topic in 2 unit or ext 1 in the prelim
I remember discussing this a while ago. I did it in the prelim but according to everyone else its a HSC topic.
 

Jago

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Permutations and Combinations is HSC Extension
 
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rukie said:
ok i think this is an easier method,

so the combination has to be A A A A ?, coz 4 cards are used ? has 48 possibilities
so there the possibilities to get 4 aces, just divide that by total number of possiblities (52C5). think that gives you the right answer

48/52C5 = 1/54145

how is there 48 possbilities? from AAAA
 

speed2

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codereder said:
how is there 48 possbilities? from AAAA
i think this is what he means; there are 5 cards given out right, 4 of them are taken up by A, i.e. AAAA_ the _ can be any of the remainig 48 cards.
 
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Jago said:
each suit has 4 cards??? nevertheless...

4 aces - (4/52) x (3/51) x (2/50) x (1/49) x 5

flush - 1 x (12/51) x (11/50) x (10/49) x (9/48)

i dont understand why it was multiplied by 5?
 

karen88

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its x 5 cos it has 5 combinations eg AAAAO AAAOA AAOAA AOAAA OAAAA
 

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