Probability of Drawing an Ace from Divided Deck

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SUMMARY

The probability of drawing an ace from the second half of a divided deck, after transferring an ace from the first half, is calculated using conditional probability. The discussion concludes that the correct probability is 3/51 multiplied by 26/27, plus 1/27 for the ace drawn from the first half. This results in a total probability of drawing an ace from the second half being 3/51 * 26/27 + 1/27. The participants emphasize the importance of understanding partitioning in probability to arrive at the correct solution.

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Homework Statement




A deck of cards is shuffled and then divided into two halves of 26 cards each. A card is drawn from one of the halves; it turns out to be an ace. The ace is then placed in the 2nd half –deck. The half is then shuffled and a card is drawn from it. Compute the probability that this drawn card is an ace.



Homework Equations



-

The Attempt at a Solution




Ans: 4/27 + 3/27 +2/27+ 1/27(because cos the other half deck may have 4,3,2,1 aces after the original ace was placed there?)
 
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kakab00 said:

Homework Statement




A deck of cards is shuffled and then divided into two halves of 26 cards each. A card is drawn from one of the halves; it turns out to be an ace. The ace is then placed in the 2nd half –deck. The half is then shuffled and a card is drawn from it. Compute the probability that this drawn card is an ace.



Homework Equations



-

The Attempt at a Solution




Ans: 4/27 + 3/27 +2/27+ 1/27(because cos the other half deck may have 4,3,2,1 aces after the original ace was placed there?)

By that argument basically ANY stack of cards has that probability. What do you know about the 'half deck'? It has 1 ace and 26 cards that could be anything. If you pick a card, you will either i) pick the ace or ii) pick one of the other cards. What is the probability of each and given that what are the odds you are holding an ace in each of the two cases?
 
So you have to use conditional probility?

Assuming A is the situation where the 2nd half-deck has only 1 ace
B is the situation where the 2nd half-deck has 2 aces
C is the situation where the 2nd half-deck has 3 aces
I is the situation where the ace that was picked was choosen
D is the situation where any other aces was picked

then P(I|A) + P(I|B) + P(I|C) + P(D|A) P(D|B) + P(D|C) ?
 
Do you know how partitioning with probability works?
 
You don't need to count the aces in the 2nd half deck. If you pick a card from it that isn't the replaced ace, what are the odds that it in turn is an ace?
 
Office_Shredder said:
Do you know how partitioning with probability works?

sadly I don't really quite know how , I'm pretty weak in this chapter

You don't need to count the aces in the 2nd half deck. If you pick a card from it that isn't the replaced ace, what are the odds that it in turn is an ace?

3/52 X 1/27?
 
kakab00 said:
sadly I don't really quite know how , I'm pretty weak in this chapter



3/52 X 1/27?

I like 3/51 better. We know where one ace is, so the other 51 cards have 3 aces spread amoung them. So one of the 'other cards' has 3/51 probability of being an ace. Now if you draw from the half deck what the probability you will get one of the 'other cards'?
 
Dick said:
I like 3/51 better. We know where one ace is, so the other 51 cards have 3 aces spread amoung them. So one of the 'other cards' has 3/51 probability of being an ace. Now if you draw from the half deck what the probability you will get one of the 'other cards'?

probability of drawing 'other cards' would be 48/51 x 1/27? why would you still need this anyway, I thought the answer would be just 3/51 X 1/27 + 1/27(the ace that was drawn from the first deck)
 
kakab00 said:
probability of drawing 'other cards' would be 48/51 x 1/27? why would you still need this anyway, I thought the answer would be just 3/51 X 1/27 + 1/27(the ace that was drawn from the first deck)

Almost, but why 3/51 X 1/27? There are 26 'other' cards in the 'half-deck'.
 
  • #10
Dick said:
Almost, but why 3/51 X 1/27? There are 26 'other' cards in the 'half-deck'.
There are 27 cards once you've added the ace.

kabab00:

The chance that a different card than the transferred ace comes up is
26/27, and not 1/27, right?
 
  • #11
NateTG said:
There are 27 cards once you've added the ace.

kabab00:

The chance that a different card than the transferred ace comes up is
26/27, and not 1/27, right?

'Other' cards are cards other than the transferred ace.
 
  • #12
Dick said:
Almost, but why 3/51 X 1/27? There are 26 'other' cards in the 'half-deck'.

3/51 x 1/27 is the chance that you would pick one of the other aces from the half deck
 
  • #13
It is not! 3/51 X 26/27 is. There are 27 cards in the deck. 26 are not the transferred ace. You have a 26/27 chance of drawing one of them and each of them has a 3/51 chance of being an ace. Now add on the odds of the other way to get an ace.
 
  • #14
Dick said:
It is not! 3/51 X 26/27 is. There are 27 cards in the deck. 26 are not the transferred ace. You have a 26/27 chance of drawing one of them and each of them has a 3/51 chance of being an ace. Now add on the odds of the other way to get an ace.

the other ways to get an ace would be 1/27 ??(the one that was drawn from the first deck)
 
  • #15
Exactly correct.
 

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