Miguel is playing a game in which a box contains four chips with numbers written on them. Two of the chips have the number 1, one chip has the number 3, and the other chip has the number 5. Miguel must choose two chips, and if both chips have the same number, he wins [tex]$\$[/tex] 2[tex]$. If the two chips he chooses have different numbers, he loses $[/tex]\[tex]$ 1$[/tex].

a. Let [tex]$X$[/tex] be the amount of money Miguel will receive or owe. Fill out the missing values in the table. (Hint: The total possible outcomes are six because there are four chips and you are choosing two of them.) (5 points)

[tex]\[
\begin{tabular}{|c|c|c|}
\hline
$X_i$ & 2 & -1 \\
\hline
$P(X_i)$ & 1/6 & 5/6 \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\][/tex]



Answer :

Sure, let's work through this problem step by step.

First, identify the possible outcomes when Miguel picks two chips from the box. Given four chips numbered as follows:
- Two chips with the number 1
- One chip with the number 3
- One chip with the number 5

Miguel can pick any two chips from these. Let's list the possible pairs:

1. (1, 1)
2. (1, 1) - Since there are two chips labeled 1, this combination counts twice.
3. (1, 3)
4. (1, 5)
5. (3, 5)
6. (3, 1) - But since we are only choosing, this is same as combinations above.

There are a total of 6 possible outcomes.

Next, we need to categorize these outcomes into winning or losing scenarios and assign the respective probabilities:
- Miguel wins [tex]$\$[/tex]2[tex]$ if both selected chips have the same number. - Winning pairs: (1, 1) and (1, 1) (counted twice), (3, 3) (but there is no chip 3 twice so doesn’t count) - Miguel loses $[/tex]\[tex]$1$[/tex] if the selected chips have different numbers.
- Losing pairs: (1, 3), (1, 5), (3, 5)

There are 3 winning outcomes where Miguel wins [tex]$\$[/tex]2[tex]$ and 3 losing outcomes where Miguel loses $[/tex]\[tex]$1$[/tex]. This tells us:

- The probability of winning [tex]$\$[/tex]2[tex]$ (P(X = 2)) is \(\frac{3}{6} = 0.5\). - The probability of losing $[/tex]\[tex]$1$[/tex] (P(X = -1)) is [tex]\(\frac{3}{6} = 0.5\)[/tex].

Now, fill in the missing values in the table:

\begin{tabular}{|c|c|c|}
\hline
[tex]$X_i$[/tex] & 2 & -1 \\
\hline
[tex]$P\left(x_i\right)$[/tex] & 0.5 & 0.5 \\
\hline
\end{tabular}

Therefore, the completed table should be as shown above:
- X_i = 2 when Miguel wins [tex]$2. - P(X = 2) = 0.5 - X_i = -1 when Miguel loses $[/tex]1.
- P(X = -1) = 0.5