Finding moment generating functions

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Homework Statement


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Homework Equations


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The Attempt at a Solution


Well I believe it to be Binomial as the probabilities never change. So I used it to solve for the moment generating function, I do howvere want to know if what I have done is correct and also how I went from sigma((Pe^t)^y(n y)q^(n-y)) as the book did this?
 

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Isn't p the probability of one head in one toss? How is it 0.75?
 
Ok so p should be .50 but does my work look ok other than that and the obvious mathematical error due to that on the second part
 
After the final sigma part like I asked above how do I arrive at the moment generating function like I did?
 
In the third line of part 2, you've written E[Y] = M'(t) by mistake for M'(0).
In the next line, you've left something out when applying the product rule to get M''.
 
DODGEVIPER13 said:
After the final sigma part like I asked above how do I arrive at the moment generating function like I did?
It's just the binomial expansion (run in reverse).
 
Ok a bit lost on what was wrong with m" it looks right to me hmmm where should I look
 
DODGEVIPER13 said:
Ok a bit lost on what was wrong with m" it looks right to me hmmm where should I look
Looks like I need to take a break. You're quite right, and the rest of your work looks good too.
 
Ok so should I change p to .5 and q to .5 and I wind up with 1.5
 
  • #10
I changed p from .75 to .5 as you said
 
  • #11
Also for the first part I now have (.50e^t+.50)^2
 
  • #12
All good.
 
  • #13
Wait why is p what you said should I not also include the probability that you flip a head and head thus making it .75
 
  • #14
When you say all good was it all good before or all good now?
 
  • #15
When you wrote the first two lines of your solution, what were you defining p to be? What do you get if you set n=2 and write out the sum in the second line?
You showed E[Y] = np. If n=2 and p=.75, would you really expect an average of 1.5 heads in two tosses?
 
  • #16
I was defining p to be the possible heads observed by the 2 flips and to the final question no I would not so I guess what I have changed it to is correct
 
  • #17
DODGEVIPER13 said:
I was defining p to be the possible heads observed by the 2 flips
But p is a probability, not a number of heads. If you wanted to approach it that way you'd need three probabilities: 0, 1 or 2 heads.
 
  • #18
Ah ok got it now thanks so the way I have it now is correct
 
  • #19
DODGEVIPER13 said:
Ah ok got it now thanks so the way I have it now is correct

Yes.
 
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