thequickandthedead
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I know it looks like that but when you expand, simplify and factorize the original you do actually get that.That can't be the correct formula. That says that a quantity equals itself minus another quantity.
I know it looks like that but when you expand, simplify and factorize the original you do actually get that.That can't be the correct formula. That says that a quantity equals itself minus another quantity.
Yeah, it's just that I think the pdf looks a bit awkward when you have a constant term added to it. I cannot recall that I've seen a pdf like that before.
The reasoning for the integration part is that if you have a multidimensional pdf, it has to become 1 as you integrate over all space for all the variables. In the 2-dimensional case, you have to integrate over both x and y, to use standard notation. Imagine that for each constant x-value, you add the probabilities of all different y-values. In a way, you take the 2-dimensional space and press it together along the y axis to have a 1-dimensional curve that only depends on x. That's integrating with the respect of one of the two variables.
I know it looks like that but when you expand, simplify and factorize the original you do actually get that.
You won't have a constant term added to it. You already have the limits of integration for both variables. Integrate over one of those variables and apply the appropriate limits, and the constant term will vanish
How will it vanish, in this case? I suppose I am missing the "apply the appropriate limits" part, since after integration over b it would become (a/6) + 9/12.
Thanks for clearing this up.
Thanks guys I think I understand that.
I am right about a and b being dependant as the two single pdds don't multiply to make the joint one?
If G/H is a group, then e_{G/H}=H.
I know the definition of G/H, but I am really lost on this one.
Are you supposed to prove this? It almost reads like a definition. If e is the identity of G, then eH is obviously the identity of G/H due to the way multiplication in G/H is defined. But eH = {eh | h in H} = H. Or you could say that the identity of G/H is the unique coset containing the identity element of G, but H is a coset of H and H contains the identity of G, so H must be the identity of G/H.
I don't understand horse-racing odds, not a gambler, so it is weird to me that the odds there being a winner don't add up to one. Maybe its for ties and not finishing the race, other things that present each horses' chance of winning-and-losing as an independent event.Math sucks
anyways, working on some statistics homework super quick and I have absolutely no idea what I'm supposed to write.
Horse Racing. In a horse race, the odds against winning are as shown in the following table.
Horse/odds 1/8 2/15 3/2 4/3 5/30 6/5 7/10 8/5
A= event one of the top two favorites (the top two favorites are the two horses with the lowest odds against winning).
B= Event the winning horse's # is above 5
any ideas?
How many '1' does the number 2^18564 has in binary notation?![]()
Math sucks
anyways, working on some statistics homework super quick and I have absolutely no idea what I'm supposed to write.
Horse Racing. In a horse race, the odds against winning are as shown in the following table.
Horse/odds 1/8 2/15 3/2 4/3 5/30 6/5 7/10 8/5
A= event one of the top two favorites (the top two favorites are the two horses with the lowest odds against winning).
B= Event the winning horse's # is above 5
any ideas?
I don't understand horse-racing odds, not a gambler, so it is weird to me that the odds there being a winner don't add up to one. Maybe its for ties and not finishing the race, other things that present each horses' chance of winning-and-losing as an independent event.
"Odds against winning" and "odds in favour of winning", when talking about gambling, is not the same as "probability of losing" and "probability of winning", respectively.
In gambling parlance, "odds against winning" is typically defined as (Probability of Losing) / (Probability of Winning) and the "odds in favor of winning" is the reciprocal of that.
This is done for some reasons related to how bookmakers compute payouts which I don't know all the details of.
Vigorish, or simply the vig, also known as juice, the cut or the take, is the amount charged by a bookmaker, or bookie, for his services. In the United States it also means the interest on a shark's loan. The term is Yiddish slang originating from the Russian word for winnings, выигрыш vyigrysh. Bookmakers use this practice to make money on their wagers regardless of the outcome. To minimize their risk, bookmakers do not want to have an interest in either side winning in a given sporting event. They are interested, instead, in getting equal betting on both outcomes of the event. In this way, the bookmaker minimizes his risk and always collects a small commission from the vigorish.
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I don't understand horse-racing odds, not a gambler, so it is weird to me that the odds there being a winner don't add up to one. Maybe its for ties and not finishing the race, other things that present each horses' chance of winning-and-losing as an independent event.
Prob(Win) = 1- Prob(Loss)
Prob(Win_MrEd): the probability Mr. Ed will win the race.
I did this and I guesstimate that the values make sense, but that doesn't mean its right:
I might have been reading your odds wrong too: % ?
No, (1 2 5) means 1 goes to 2 goes to 5 goes to 1. The permuation you're given has 1 going to 5 and 5 going to 2 and 2 going to 1, not the other way around.Hey, can anyone help me with some simple questions regarding permutations, cycles, transpositions and all that? I did some homework, so I know the correct answers to my problems, but I'm curious if they're the only answers, since I'm not quite grasping this.
1. Let's say I have a permutation given by
(1 2 3 4 5 6)
(5 1 3 6 2 4)
And I'm told to find all orbits.
I know that
(1 5 2)(4 6) is correct.
Is (1 2 5)(4 6) also correct, or does order matter in this case?
2. Similar problem about not knowing if order matters. This time I need to break
(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8)
(3 1 4 7 2 5 8 6)
into a product of transpositions.
I did this:
(1,2)(1,5)(1,6)(1,8)(1,7)(1,4)(1,3)
Could I reorder those, or is that the only correct answer?
Thanks for the help guys.
No, (1 2 5) means 1 goes to 2 goes to 5 goes to 1. The permuation you're given has 1 going to 5 and 5 going to 2 and 2 going to 1, not the other way around.
That isn't the only correct answer (you could also do (6,5)(5,2)(2, 1)(1, 3)(3, 4)(4, 7)(7, 8), or one of a billion other ways of doing it), but doing the same cycles in a different order won't work because cycles don't generally commute with each other if they're not disjoint.
But then -(2(αβ+αγ+βα) has to be equal to zero. The unnecessary parentheses in the expression ((α+β+γ
^2)-(2(αβ+αγ+βα
) lead me to believe that an exponent or something is missing.
Sorry for the late reply but let me demonstrate why -(2(αβ+αγ+βα) isn't zero.
i get my values of α+β+γ and αβ+αγ+βα from the original equation (-b/a and c/a).
The question is Find the value of α^2+β^2+γ^2. (which is the same as (α+β+γ^2)
This simplifies to β^2-γβ+γ^2+γ^2-αγ+α^2+α^2-βα+β^2.
Which simplifies to (2(α+β+γ^2)-(2(αβ+αγ+βα
) (yes, i missed a 2 out)
Then i just substitute my values of α+β+γ and αβ+αγ+βα into the final expression to solve the whole thing.
The bolded part is not very nice notation. Typically they are not the same.Sorry for the late reply but let me demonstrate why -(2(αβ+αγ+βα) isn't zero.
i get my values of α+β+γ and αβ+αγ+βα from the original equation (-b/a and c/a).
The question is Find the value of α^2+β^2+γ^2. (which is the same as (α+β+γ^2)
This simplifies to β^2-γβ+γ^2+γ^2-αγ+α^2+α^2-βα+β^2.
Which simplifies to (2(α+β+γ^2)-(2(αβ+αγ+βα
) (yes, i missed a 2 out)
Then i just substitute my values of α+β+γ and αβ+αγ+βα into the final expression to solve the whole thing.
I'm a bit confused by this. Did you verify thatSorry for the late reply but let me demonstrate why -(2(αβ+αγ+βα) isn't zero.
i get my values of α+β+γ and αβ+αγ+βα from the original equation (-b/a and c/a).
The question is Find the value of α^2+β^2+γ^2. (which is the same as (α+β+γ^2)
This simplifies to β^2-γβ+γ^2+γ^2-αγ+α^2+α^2-βα+β^2.
Which simplifies to (2(α+β+γ^2)-(2(αβ+αγ+βα
) (yes, i missed a 2 out)
Then i just substitute my values of α+β+γ and αβ+αγ+βα into the final expression to solve the whole thing.
Hello GAF. I'm learning linear algebra. I'm doing an example problem regarding determinants. The question says to use row operations to simplify this expression to find the determinant. Based on the rules we learned, it seems like I'm either supposed to prove the determinant is zero, or to reduce the matrix to a triangular state and find the determinant that way..... but neither of those seems possible. Any ideas?
the 3x3 matrix I'm looking at is,
| 1 t t^2 |
| t 1 t |
| t^2 t 1 |
I don't know why they want you to do row reduction to find the determinant, unless you're learning how manipulating rows changes the determinant.
Anyways, If you did do row reduction to get a triangular matrix, its doable.
r2 to r2 + (-t)r1
r3 to r3 + (-t)r1
r3 to r3 +(-t)r2
None of these change the determinant, and you get (1-t^2)(1-t^2)
Which equals (1-2t^2+t^4)
If you just checked the determinant from the start you get:
1(1-t^2) - t(t-t^3) + t^2(t^2 - t^2) = (1-t^2 - t(t-t^3) = 1 - t^2 - t^2 + t^4 = (1-2t^2+t^4) so we're good.
Dammit. I wasn't thinking of t as a constant. I just assumed I had to treat it as an unknown variable. That makes perfect sense. Thank you.
Okay I'm only asking because I think my book is wrong (I hate when this happens, total mindfuck).
Re: graphing transformations
F(x)= √x -> compressed horizontally by the factor 1/2, reflected in the y-axis,
The book has the answer negative for a, shouldn't it be negative K? so √-2(...) instead of -√2(...)?
i am about to finish up algebra, what should i take next? college algebra/trig or geometry?
Trig
You should be able to use this:Quick stats question that it would be great to get some help on.
THETA is uniformly distributed on [1,3]. I need to find
E[THETA | THETA < W / ALPHA]
or in words - expected value of theta conditional on theta being less than w/alpha.
I tried it using an integral over theta multiplied by the pdf of theta with w/alpha as the upper limit and 1 as the lower limit but im getting the wrong answer I think. Is this the right method?
I'm a bit confused by this. Did you verify thatis true? Because generally it is not. Also, did you expand
into
? Because that doesn't seem right to me either.![]()
Now that i go over my working, i have no idea where i got the minus signs from.
But, as Leezard also pointed out, what's the problem with α^2+β^2+γ^2 being the same as (α+β+γ^2?
Now that i go over my working, i have no idea where i got the minus signs from.
But, as Leezard also pointed out, what's the problem with α^2+β^2+γ^2 being the same as (α+β+γ^2?
Because that's not how exponents work. (α+β+γ^2 is (α+β+γ
(α+β+γ
. Expanding this doesn't give α^2+β^2+γ^2, it gives α^2+2αβ+β^2+2αγ+2βγ+γ^2
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