Discrete Math: Counting Problem with balls. 1. A bowl contains 10 red balls and 10 blue balls.A woman selects balls at random without looking at them. a) How many balls must she select to be sure of having at least three balls of the same color? b) How many balls must she select to be sure of having at least three blue balls?

puntdald8

puntdald8

Answered question

2022-09-06

Discrete Math: Counting Problem with balls
1. A bowl contains 10 red balls and 10 blue balls.A woman selects balls at random without looking at them.
a) How many balls must she select to be sure of having at least three balls of the same color?
b) How many balls must she select to be sure of having at least three blue balls?

Answer & Explanation

Sanaa Holder

Sanaa Holder

Beginner2022-09-07Added 20 answers

Step 1
4 balls is not enough, because you could draw two blue and two red balls. 5 balls is enough, because (by the pigeonhole principle) you will always have at least 3 red or at least 3 blue balls.
Step 2
If we divide five object in two groups, one group contains at least half of the objects (since they cannot both contain strictly less than half of the objects). A group cannot contain 5 2 objects, so one group must contain at least 3 object.

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