Quiz 3 Solution

1.   You purchase a certain product.  The manual states that the lifetime T of the product, defined as the amount of time (in years) that product works properly until it fails, satisfies

Pr(Tt)=exp(t330), for all t0.

You use the product for two years without any problems.  What is the probability that it fails some time in the third year?

Solution:  Let A=[2,) be the event that the lifetime exceeds two years.  You are told that A has occurred, i.e., A is given.  Let B=[2,3) be the event that the product fails some time in the third year.  We must compute Pr(BA).  We have

Pr(BA)=Pr(BA)Pr(A) =Pr([2,)[2,3))Pr([2,)) =Pr([2,3))Pr([2,))

=Pr([2,))Pr([3,))Pr([2,))

=exp(8/30)exp(27/30)exp(8/30)

=1exp(19/30)0.46918

2.   A computer manufacturer buys 60% of its memory chips from vendor A, 30% of its memory chips from vendor B, and 10% of its memory chips from vendor C.  Memory chips from vendor A function correctly with probability 0.99, memory chips from vendor B function correctly with probability 0.96, and memory chips from vendor C function correctly with probability 0.93.

A memory chip is selected for testing uniformly at random from all chips purchased.  What is the probability that it functions correctly?

Solution:  Let A be the event that the chip was obtained from vendor A, let B be the event that the chip was obtained from vendor B, and let C be the event that the chip was obtained from vendor C.  Let W be the event that the chip is working, i.e., functioning correctly.

We are told:  Pr(A)=0.6, Pr(B)=0.3, and Pr(C)=0.1.  Furthermore,  Pr(WA)=0.99, Pr(WB)=0.96 and Pr(WC)=0.93.   Since A, B and C are pairwise disjoint, but their union is the entire sample space, we apply the total probability theorem to obtain

Pr(W)=Pr(WA)Pr(A)+Pr(WB)Pr(B)+Pr(WC)Pr(C)

=0.990.6+0.960.3+0.930.1=0.975.

Another way to get to this answer is as follows.   Suppose we buy 1000 chips in total, 600 from vendor A, 300 from B and 100 from C.  Furthermore, suppose that the probabilities give exact proportions, so 594 of the chips from vendor A are working (i.e., 99%), 288 from B are working and 93 from C are working.  The total number of working chips is thus 594+288+93=975, and the probability of selecting one of these is 975/1000 = 0.975.

3.  The memory chip selected in the previous question is found not to be functioning correctly.  What is the probability that it was supplied by vendor B?

Solution:  We are interested in computing Pr(BWc).  Applying Bayes' Theorem we get

Pr(BWc)=Pr(WcB)Pr(B)Pr(WcA)Pr(A)+Pr(WcB)Pr(B)+Pr(WcC)Pr(C)

=(0.04)(0.3)(0.01)(0.6)+(0.04)(0.3)+(0.07)(0.1)

=0.48.

Another way to see this parallels the second approach in the previous question.  Out of 1000 chips purchased, 25 are not working (6 from vendor A, 12 from B, and 7 from C).  The probability that the bad chip came from vendor B is 12/25=0.48.