Ask Question
5 January, 03:02

A chip company has two manufacturing plants. Plant A produces 40% of the chips and Plant B produces 60% of the chips produced by the company. The company knows that 2% of the chips produced by plant A are defective and 1% of the chips produced by plant B are defective. If a randomly chosen chip produced by the company is defective, what is the likelihood that the chip came from plant A

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 5 January, 03:14
    0
    P (A/D) = 0.5714

    Step-by-step explanation:

    Let's call A the event that a chip is produced by Plant A, B the event that a chip is produced by Plant B and D the event that the chip is defective

    So, the likelihood or probability P (A/D) that a chip came from plant A given that the chip is defective is calculated as:

    P (A/D) = P (A∩D) / P (D)

    Where P (D) = P (A∩D) + P (B∩D)

    Then, the probability P (A∩D) that a chip is produced by plant A and it is defective is calculated as:

    P (A∩D) = 0.4*0.02 = 0.008

    Because, Plant A produces 40% of the chips and 2% of the chips produced by plant A are defective.

    At the same way, the probability P (B∩D) that a chip is produced by plant B and it is defective is calculated as:

    P (B∩D) = 0.6*0.01 = 0.006

    So, P (D) and P (A/D) are equal to:

    P (D) = 0.008 + 0.006 = 0.014

    P (A/D) = 0.008/0.014 = 0.5714

    it means that if a randomly chosen chip produced by the company is defective, the likelihood that the chip came from plant A is 0.5714
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “A chip company has two manufacturing plants. Plant A produces 40% of the chips and Plant B produces 60% of the chips produced by 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