Ask Question
12 December, 06:46

An airline estimates that 94% of people booked on their flights actually show up. If the airline books 68 people on a flight for which the maximum number is 66, what is the probability that the number of people who show up will exceed the capacity of the plane

+5
Answers (1)
  1. 12 December, 10:30
    0
    0.0788

    Step-by-step explanation:

    In this case the final probability will be the sum of the probability of when there are 67 more reserves when there are 68.

    That is to say:

    P (f) = P (x = 67) + P (x = 68)

    n = 68; p = 0.94

    Now we calculate each one:

    P (x) = nCx * (p ^ x) * [ (1 - p) ^ (n-x) ]

    nCx = n! / (x! * (n - x) !)

    Knowing the formula, we replace:

    P (67) = 68C67 * (0.94 ^ 67) * [ (1 - 0.94) ^ (68-67) ]

    nCx = 68! / (67! * (68 - 67) !) = 68! / 67! = 68

    P (67) = 68 * (0.0158) * (0.06) = 0.064

    Now for x = 68

    P (68) = 68C68 * (0.94 ^ 68) * [ (0.0641 - 0.94) ^ (68-68) ]

    nCx = 68! / (68! * (68 - 68) !) = 1

    P (68) = 1 * (0.0148) * (1) = 0.0148

    Then replacing in the main formula:

    P (f) = P (x = 67) + P (x = 68)

    P (f) = 0.064 + 0.0148

    P (f) = 0.0788
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “An airline estimates that 94% of people booked on their flights actually show up. If the airline books 68 people on a flight for which the ...” in 📘 Mathematics if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers