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Can i please have the solution to this?
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Hi All,

When dealing with probability questions, there are 2 outcomes that you can calculate: what you WANT to have happen and what you DON'T WANT to have happen. When you add these two outcomes together, the result will equal 1.

Here, it's actually pretty easy to calculate the outcome that you DON'T WANT: NOT getting the winning key. Then we can subtract that fraction from 1 to get the probability of what we do WANT...

There are 10 keys and 1 of them is the 'winning' key.

Probability of NOT getting the winning key on the first grab = 9/10
Probability of NOT getting the winning key on the second grab = 8/9

(9/10)(8/9) = 8/10 = 4/5

So, the probability of NOT getting the winning key = 4/5

The probability that we DO get the winning key = 1 - 4/5 = 1/5

Final Answer:
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
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In a contest, a bowl contains 10 keys, one of which will open a treasure chest and nine of which will not. If a contestant selects the key that opens the treasure chest, she wins the contents of that chest. If Anna is allowed to draw two keys, simultaneously and at random, from the bowl as the first contestant, what is the probability that she wins the prize?

A. 1/10
B. 1/9
C. 1/5
D. 19/90
E. 2/9


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VERITAS PREP OFFICIAL SOLUTION:

When Anna reveals her two keys, there are two possible sequences that allow her to win:

1) The first key is the winner, the second is not

2) The first key is not the winner, but the second one is

And you can calculate those probabilities:

1) 1/10 * 9/9 = 1/10

2) 9/10 * 1/9 = 1/10

Add those two favorable probabilities and you have 2/10 which reduces to 1/5.
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since the two keys have been drawn simultaneously(and not one by one) and hence the no of cases must be 10 c2 not 10 *9. Now-

one key is correct one and second key incorrect one= 1* 9c1

there is no logic of first and second key as the draw was simutaneous. so probability =9c1 /10c2=1/5
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vishnu440
since the two keys have been drawn simultaneously(and not one by one) and hence the no of cases must be 10 c2 not 10 *9. Now-

one key is correct one and second key incorrect one= 1* 9c1

there is no logic of first and second key as the draw was simutaneous. so probability =9c1 /10c2=1/5

Note that considering first and second key in a valid method even though we talk of simultaneous draws because when you pick out two, you will touch one of them first. They are both drawn out simultaneously but not picked simultaneously. Of course when you consider that first key is A and second key is B, you have to consider the other side too where the first key is B and second key is A.

The answer will be the same no matter which method you use - combinations or probability.
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Bunuel
In a contest, a bowl contains 10 keys, one of which will open a treasure chest and nine of which will not. If a contestant selects the key that opens the treasure chest, she wins the contents of that chest. If Anna is allowed to draw two keys, simultaneously and at random, from the bowl as the first contestant, what is the probability that she wins the prize?

A. 1/10
B. 1/9
C. 1/5
D. 19/90
E. 2/9


Kudos for a correct solution.

There are two ways in which the right key is taken out


(1st key is the right one & second wrong one) or (1st key is the wrong one & 2nd one is right)

Since it is "or" hence we will add the probabilities.

(\(\frac{1}{10}\) * \(\frac{9}{9}\)) + (\(\frac{9}{10}\) * \(\frac{1}{9}\))


\(\frac{1}{10}\) = Only one key is the right key. Total options are 10

\(\frac{9}{9}\) = After first key is taken out, there r 9 favorable options (all keys r wrong). Total options are also 9

\(\frac{9}{10}\) = For first key to be the wrong one, favorable options are nine. Total options are 10.

\(\frac{1}{9}\) = For second key to be correct one, only one favorable option is there out of available 9 options.

\(\frac{9}{90}\) + \(\frac{9}{90}\)

\(\frac{18}{90}\) = \(\frac{1}{5}\)

C is the answer.
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Bunuel
In a contest, a bowl contains 10 keys, one of which will open a treasure chest and nine of which will not. If a contestant selects the key that opens the treasure chest, she wins the contents of that chest. If Anna is allowed to draw two keys, simultaneously and at random, from the bowl as the first contestant, what is the probability that she wins the prize?

A. 1/10
B. 1/9
C. 1/5
D. 19/90
E. 2/9

P(Anna wins) = 1 - P(Anna does not win)

Let’s determine P(Anna does not win). Note that the probability that the first key doesn’t open the treasure chest is 9/10 and the probability that the second key doesn’t open the treasure chest (given that the first key didn’t work) is 8/9.

P(Anna does not win) = 9/10 x 8/9 = 4/5.

Thus, the probability that she wins is 1 - ⅘ = 1/5.

Answer: C
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In a contest, a bowl contains 10 keys, one of which will open a treasure chest and nine of which will not. If a contestant selects the key that opens the treasure chest, she wins the contents of that chest. If Anna is allowed to draw two keys, simultaneously and at random, from the bowl as the first contestant, what is the probability that she wins the prize?

A. 1/10
B. 1/9
C. 1/5
D. 19/90
E. 2/9

Two possibilities
1. Draws the correct key on attempt 1
P = 1/10

2. Draws 1 incorrect key followed by the correct key
P = 9/10 x 1/9 = 1/10

1/10 + 1/10 = 2/10 = 1/5

C
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