A jar contains 3 pink balls, 6 blue balls, and 3 red balls.

Event [tex]$A =$[/tex] drawing a red ball on the first draw

Event [tex]$B =$[/tex] drawing a pink ball on the second draw

If two balls are drawn from the jar, one after the other without replacement, what is [tex]$P(A$[/tex] and [tex]$B)$[/tex] expressed in simplest form?

A) [tex]$\frac{3}{44}$[/tex]

B) [tex]$\frac{4}{9}$[/tex]

C) [tex]$\frac{3}{11}$[/tex]

D) [tex]$\frac{1}{4}$[/tex]



Answer :

To solve this problem, we need to find the probability of two specific events happening in sequence without replacement. We'll break it down step-by-step.

### Given:
- 3 pink balls
- 6 blue balls
- 3 red balls

Total number of balls initially:
[tex]\[ 3 + 6 + 3 = 12 \][/tex]

### Step 1: Probability of Event A (drawing a red ball on the first draw)
[tex]\[ P(A) = \frac{\text{Number of red balls}}{\text{Total number of balls}} = \frac{3}{12} = \frac{1}{4} \][/tex]

### Step 2: Probability of Event B given that Event A has occurred (drawing a pink ball after drawing a red ball)
If a red ball has been drawn first, we are now left with:
- 2 red balls
- 6 blue balls
- 3 pink balls

So, the total number of remaining balls is:
[tex]\[ 12 - 1 = 11 \][/tex]

The probability of drawing a pink ball after already having drawn a red ball:
[tex]\[ P(B | A) = \frac{\text{Number of pink balls}}{\text{Total remaining balls}} = \frac{3}{11} \][/tex]

### Step 3: Probability of both events A and B happening (P(A and B))
[tex]\[ P(A \text{ and } B) = P(A) \times P(B | A) \][/tex]

Substitute the probabilities:
[tex]\[ P(A) = \frac{1}{4} \][/tex]
[tex]\[ P(B | A) = \frac{3}{11} \][/tex]

So,
[tex]\[ P(A \text{ and } B) = \frac{1}{4} \times \frac{3}{11} = \frac{3}{44} \][/tex]

Hence, the probability of drawing a red ball first and then a pink ball is:
[tex]\[ \frac{3}{44} \][/tex]

Therefore, the answer is:
[tex]\[ \boxed{\frac{3}{44}} \][/tex]