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Original Question
Tad draws three cards at random, without replacement, from a deck of ten cards numbered 1 through 10. What is the probability t...Asked by Nikhil
Problem:
Tad draws three cards at random, without replacement, from a deck of ten cards numbered 1 through 10. What is the probability that no two of the cards drawn have numbers that differ by 1? Express your answer as a common fraction.
Scott's solution:
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there are 9 pairs of cards that differ by one
... 1-2, 2-3, 3-4, etc.
there are 10C2 possible pairs ... 45
so the probability of a pair differing by one is 9/45 or .2
... by more than one is (1 - .2) = .8
3 cards contain 3 pairs
.8^3 = .512
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Thanks a lot Scott, Appreciate your quick response.
I reviewed the answer key and it states 7/15 as the answer to this problem. I am wondering if the answer key is incorrect.
Tad draws three cards at random, without replacement, from a deck of ten cards numbered 1 through 10. What is the probability that no two of the cards drawn have numbers that differ by 1? Express your answer as a common fraction.
Scott's solution:
===============
there are 9 pairs of cards that differ by one
... 1-2, 2-3, 3-4, etc.
there are 10C2 possible pairs ... 45
so the probability of a pair differing by one is 9/45 or .2
... by more than one is (1 - .2) = .8
3 cards contain 3 pairs
.8^3 = .512
********************************
Thanks a lot Scott, Appreciate your quick response.
I reviewed the answer key and it states 7/15 as the answer to this problem. I am wondering if the answer key is incorrect.
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