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17 September, 09:07

Spike is not a terribly bright student. His chances of passing chemistry are 0.35; mathematics, 0.40; and both, 0.12. Are the events "Spike passes chemistry" and "Spike passes mathematics" independent? What is the probability that he fails both subjects?

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  1. 17 September, 09:16
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    The events "Spike passes chemistry" and "Spike passes mathematics" are not independent.

    The probability that he fails both subjects = 0.37

    Step-by-step explanation:

    The probability of Spike passing Chemistry = P (Chemistry) = 0.35

    The probability of Spike passing Mathematics = P (Mathematics) = 0.40

    The probability of Spike passing both Chemistry and Mathematics = P (Chemistry, Mathematics) = 0.12

    For the events "Spike passes chemistry" and "Spike passes mathematics" to be independent, P (Chemistry, Mathematics) should be equal to P (Chemistry) * P (Mathematics)

    But P (Chemistry) * P (Mathematics) = 0.35*0.40 = 0.14

    So the two events are not independent.

    The Probability that he passes Chemistry or Mathematics is given by P (Chemistry) + P (Mathematics) - P (Chemistry, Mathematics)

    = 0.35+0.40-0.12=0.63

    So the probability that he fails both subjects is the complement of this, namely (1 - 0.63) = 0.37
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