HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon (archive) (1 Viewer)

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glittergal96

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Re: HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon

A potentially biased coin produces a H when flipped with probability p.

If you flip this coin repeatedly until you get k H's in a row (k being an arbitrary positive integer), what is the average number of flips you will have to do in total?
Your answer should depend on both p and k.

(If you find this question too difficult, try just solving the k=1 and/or k=2 case, which may be easier for you to think about.)
 

glittergal96

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Re: HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon

Also note that we are taking the average of a quantity that can take infinitely many positive values (the process might take an arbitrarily large number of flips to terminate). This is done exactly the same way as averaging something that only takes finitely many values, the sum just contains infinitely many terms.

 
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InteGrand

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Re: HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon

A potentially biased coin produces a H when flipped with probability p.

If you flip this coin repeatedly until you get k H's in a row (k being an arbitrary positive integer), what is the average number of flips you will have to do in total?
Your answer should depend on both p and k.

(If you find this question too difficult, try just solving the k=1 and/or k=2 case, which may be easier for you to think about.)


 

glittergal96

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Re: HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon

Not quite.

1/p is indeed correct for k=1.

However I think you have misinterpreted the problem judging by your induction.
A sequence terminates after k consecutive heads, rather than just k heads in total.
 

InteGrand

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Re: HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon

Not quite.

1/p is indeed correct for k=1.

However I think you have misinterpreted the problem judging by your induction.
A sequence terminates after k consecutive heads, rather than just k heads in total.
Right, misread it, didn't see the "in a row".
 

braintic

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Re: HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon

So this has now become a thread for ex-students?
 

porcupinetree

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Re: HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon

A question for the actual 2016'ers:

4 letters of the word METRONOME are chosen and arranged to form a word. How many possible different words are there?
 

porcupinetree

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Re: HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon

My Q was also directed at current HSC students.
Haha soz, glanced over it and it appeared like it was one of the university level questions that commonly arise among the 2016 threads
 

Paradoxica

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Re: HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon

Prove the binomial theorem using calculus and induction.
 

davidgoes4wce

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Re: HSC 2016 MX2 Combinatorics Marathon

If all the letters of the word REARRANGE are arranged at random, what is the probability that the R's are together?

Ans: 1/12
 
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