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I have this question:
The probability of winning the jackpot on the National Lottery is
which is 0.0000000715. How many tickets do I need to buy to have at least a 10% chance of winning the jackpot?I am meant to either use the Binomial or the Poisson distribution for this, but I don't know how to approach this question.
Please could you help me?
Thank you in advance.
Hi AndrewP;
You don't have to to use the binomial distribution.
1/ 0.0000000715 = 13 986 013.9
That means that there are a bit less than 14 million numbers, with only one grand prize winner.You need to buy 1,398,602 tickets (all with different numbers).
If he is right about the structure: 13 986 014 different tickets and only one grand prize winner. Then it is hard to argue with his idea of buying 1 398 602 different tickets. This would give you slightly better than 10% chances. Provided as I said that this is the structure of the lottery.
Here is another entirely different answer that the boys over at NRICH came up with:
https://nrich.maths.org/discus/messages … 1197837835
Here is another which agrees with MornigF
http://grahamkendall.net/Math/Math%20Ne … mm-385.txt
Its about 2 /3 down the page.
Last edited by bobbym (2009-10-07 05:34:56)
In mathematics, you don't understand things. You just get used to them.
If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.
Always satisfy the Prime Directive of getting the right answer above all else.
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