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We hope that you enjoyed exploring this problem.
Here are some of the solutions which we have previously received from students:
Derin from Woodhouse College gave a clear presentation of his reasoning:
At the first draw, when there are 6 balls in the bag, you want one of your 3 numbers to be picked, so the chance of that happening is $\frac{3}{6}$ (or $\frac{1}{2}$).
For your second ball to be chosen, when there are five balls left in the bag and you want one of your 2 remaining numbers to be picked, the chance of that happening is $\frac{2}{5}$.
For the last ball to be chosen, when there are four balls left in the bag and you want your one remaining number to be picked, the chance of that happening is $\frac{1}{4}$.
In order for all three of your balls to be picked sequentially, you must multiply the probabilities of each being chosen on their own, i.e:$\frac{3}{6}\times\frac{2}{5}\times\frac{1}{4}= \frac{1}{20}$ therefore you have a one-in-twenty (or 0.05) chance of winning.
Ayden from Melbourn Village College calculated the solution to the rest of the problem. He also noticed that the chances of picking two balls out of six and four balls out of six is the same.
If you had a 2 out of 6 ball lottery it would increase your chances of winning:
$\frac{2}{6}\times\frac{1}{5}= \frac{1}{15}$
Drawing 4 balls instead of 2 will keep the chance of winning the same:
$\frac{4}{6}\times\frac{3}{5}\times\frac{2}{4}\times\frac{1}{3}= \frac{1}{15}$
Having a 1-ball lottery will dramatically increase your chance of winning to $\frac{1}{6}$.
Having a 5 ball lottery will give you the same chance of winning:
$\frac{5}{6}\times\frac{4}{5}\times\frac{3}{4}\times\frac{2}{3}\times\frac{1}{2}= \frac{1}{6}$
To minimise the chance of winning a 10-ball lottery, the organisers should require participants to pick 5 balls.
Phil from Wilson's School provided the explanation:
If the Mathsland Lottery changes to a 10-ball lottery and wants to minimise the chance of winning, then they should ask participants to pick 5 balls correctly to win. This is because if you look at the six-ball lottery the chance of winning was its lowest when three balls were needed to be picked correctly. This is half of three, and on either side of 3 balls, 2 and 4, the chance of winning went
back up.
When 5 out of ten must be picked, the chance of winning is
$\frac{5}{10}\times\frac{4}{9}\times\frac{3}{8}\times\frac{2}{7}\times\frac{1}{6}= \frac{24}{6048}=\frac{1}{252}$
which is smaller than when 4 balls have to be picked:
$\frac{4}{10}\times\frac{3}{9}\times\frac{2}{8}\times\frac{1}{7}=\frac{1}{210}$
and when 6 balls have to be picked:
$\frac{6}{10}\times\frac{5}{9}\times\frac{4}{8}\times\frac{3}{7}\times\frac{2}{6}\times\frac{1}{5}=\frac{1}{210}$
As we get further away from picking 5, the probabilities keep increasing:
When 3 balls have to be picked:
$\frac{3}{10}\times\frac{2}{9}\times\frac{1}{8}=\frac{1}{120}$
and when 8 balls have to be picked:
$\frac{8}{10}\times\frac{7}{9}\times\frac{6}{8}\times\frac{5}{7}\times\frac{4}{6}\times\frac{3}{5}\times\frac{2}{4}\times\frac{1}{3}=\frac{1}{45}$
Therefore if the Mathsland lottery is organising a ten-ball lottery, participants should be ask to predict 5 balls, since this results in the lowest winning chances.
It is worth pointing out that picking 2 balls out of 6 balls is essentially the same as picking 4 balls out of 6 balls, since in both cases 2 balls need to be identified and separated. The two processes are equivalent, so the probabilities match. The same goes for picking 1 out of 6 and picking 5 out of 6, etc.
The chance of winning the UK National lottery, in which participants choose 6 numbers from 49, is:
$\frac{6}{49}\times\frac{5}{48}\times\frac{4}{47}\times\frac{3}{46}\times\frac{2}{45}\times\frac{1}{44}=\frac{1}{13,983,816}$ or approximately 1 in 14 million.
Well done to everyone!
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