1984 AHSME Problems/Problem 19

Revision as of 12:51, 5 July 2013 by Nathan wailes (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Problem

A box contains $11$ balls, numbered $1, 2, 3, ... 11$. If $6$ balls are drawn simultaneously at random, what is the probability that the sum of the numbers on the balls drawn is odd?

$\mathrm{(A) \ }\frac{100}{231} \qquad \mathrm{(B) \ }\frac{115}{231} \qquad \mathrm{(C) \ } \frac{1}{2} \qquad \mathrm{(D) \ }\frac{118}{231} \qquad \mathrm{(E) \ } \frac{6}{11}$

Solution

There are exactly $3$ ways the sum can be odd: exactly $5$ are odd, exactly $3$ are odd, or exactly $1$ is odd. There are exactly $6$ odd numbers in the set. For the first case, there are ${6\choose5}\times{5\choose1}=30$ possibilities. For the second case, there are ${6\choose3}\times{5\choose3}=200$ possibilities. For the third case, there are ${6\choose1}\times{5\choose5}=6$ possibilities. In each case, we're choosing out of the $6$ odd numbers which ones will be picked, and multiplying that by out of the $5$ even numbers, which one of those will be picked so that there are $6$ numbers. In total,there are $236$ desirable possibilities out of a total of ${11\choose6}=462$ possibilities. Thus, the answer is $\frac{236}{462}=\frac{118}{231}, \boxed{\text{D}}$.

See Also

1984 AHSME (ProblemsAnswer KeyResources)
Preceded by
Problem 18
Followed by
Problem 20
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
All AHSME Problems and Solutions

The problems on this page are copyrighted by the Mathematical Association of America's American Mathematics Competitions. AMC logo.png