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Examples For 2.6 Poisson Distribution

The document provides examples of using the Poisson distribution to calculate probabilities of events that occur randomly and independently over discrete intervals of time or space. It gives examples of calculating probabilities for the number of traffic accidents based on their average weekly rate, and calculating probabilities of defective parts in a sample based on the defective rate at a factory. The key properties of the Poisson distribution and binomial approximation to the Poisson are also summarized.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
122 views

Examples For 2.6 Poisson Distribution

The document provides examples of using the Poisson distribution to calculate probabilities of events that occur randomly and independently over discrete intervals of time or space. It gives examples of calculating probabilities for the number of traffic accidents based on their average weekly rate, and calculating probabilities of defective parts in a sample based on the defective rate at a factory. The key properties of the Poisson distribution and binomial approximation to the Poisson are also summarized.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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STAT 400 Stepanov

UIUC
Examples for 2.6 Dalpiaz

Poisson Distribution:
X = the number of occurrences of a particular event in an interval of time or space.

P( X = x ) =
λx⋅ e −λ , x = 0, 1, 2, 3, … .
x!
E( X ) = λ, Var( X ) = λ.

Table III ( pp. 580 – 582 ) gives P( X ≤ x )

1. Traffic accidents at a particular intersection follow Poisson distribution with


an average rate of 1.4 per week.
a) What is the probability that the next week is accident-free?

1.4 0 ⋅ e − 1.4
1 week ⇒ λ = 1.4. P(X = 0) = ≈ 0.2466.
0!

b) What is the probability that there will be exactly 3 accidents next week?

1.4 3 ⋅ e − 1.4
1 week ⇒ λ = 1.4. P(X = 3) = ≈ 0.1128.
3!

c) What is the probability that there will be at most 2 accidents next week?

1 week ⇒ λ = 1.4.
P(X ≤ 2) = P(X = 0) + P(X = 1) + P(X = 2)

1.4 0 ⋅ e − 1.4 1.4 1 ⋅ e − 1.4 1.4 2 ⋅ e − 1.4


= + +
0! 1! 2!
≈ 0.2466 + 0.3452 + 0.2417 = 0.8335.
d) What is the probability that there will be at least 2 accidents during the next
two weeks?

2 weeks ⇒ λ = 2.8.

 2.8 0 ⋅ e − 2.8 2.8 1 ⋅ e − 2.8 


P( X ≥ 2 ) = 1 – [ P( X = 0 ) + P( X = 1 ) ] = 1−  + 
 0 ! 1! 
≈ 1 – [ 0.0608 + 0.1703 ] = 0.7689.

e) What is the probability that there will be exactly 5 accidents during the next
four weeks?

5.6 5 ⋅ e − 5.6
4 weeks ⇒ λ = 5.6. P(X = 5) = ≈ 0.1697.
5!

f) What is the probability that there will be exactly 2 accidents tomorrow?

0.2 2 ⋅ e − 0.2
1 day ⇒ λ = 0.2. P(X = 2) = ≈ 0.0164.
2!

g) What is the probability that the next accident will not occur for three days?

0.6 0 ⋅ e − 0.6
3 days ⇒ λ = 0.6. P(X = 0) = ≈ 0.5488.
0!

h) What is the probability that there will be exactly three accident-free weeks
during the next eight weeks?

“Success” = an accident-free week

1.4 0 ⋅ e − 1.4
1 week ⇒ λ = 1.4. p = P ( “Success” ) = P ( X = 0 ) = ≈ 0.2466.
0!

P ( exactly 3 accident-free weeks in 8 weeks ) = 8 C 3 ⋅ 0.2466 3 ⋅ 0.7534 5 ≈ 0.20384.


( Binomial distribution )
i) What is the probability that there will be exactly five accident-free days
during the next week?

“Success” = an accident-free day

0.2 0 ⋅ e − 0.2
1 day ⇒ λ = 0.2. p = P ( “Success” ) = P ( X = 0 ) = ≈ 0.81873.
0!

P ( exactly 5 accident-free days in 7 days ) = 7 C 5 ⋅ 0.81873 5 ⋅ 0.18127 2 ≈ 0.25385.


( Binomial distribution )

When n is large ( n ≥ 20 ) and p is small ( p ≤ 0.05 ) and n ⋅ p ≤ 5,


Binomial probabilities can be approximated by Poisson probabilities.
For this, set λ = n ⋅ p.

2. Suppose the defective rate at a particular factory is 1%. Suppose 50 parts


were selected from the daily output of parts. Let X denote the number of
defective parts in the sample.
a) Find the probability that the sample contains exactly 2 defective parts.

 50 
P ( X = 2 ) =   ⋅ (0.01) 2 ⋅ (0.99 ) 48 ≈ 0.075618.
2

b) Use Poisson approximation to find the probability that the sample contains
exactly 2 defective parts.

λ = n ⋅ p = 0.5.

0.5 2 ⋅ e − 0.5
P( X = 2 ) = ≈ 0.075816.
2!
c) Find the probability that the sample contains at most 1 defective part.

P( X ≤ 1 ) = P( X = 0 ) + P( X = 1 )
 50   50 
=   ⋅ (0.01) 0 ⋅ (0.99 ) 50 +   ⋅ (0.01) 1 ⋅ (0.99 ) 49 ≈ 0.910565.
0 1

d) Use Poisson approximation to find the probability that the sample contains
at most 1defective part.

P( X ≤ 1 ) = P( X = 0 ) + P( X = 1 )

0.5 0 ⋅ e − 0.5 0.5 1 ⋅ e − 0.5


= + ≈ 0.909796.
0! 1!

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