(a) Use logarithm tables to evaluate \(\frac{15.05 \times \sqrt{0.00695}}{6.95 \times 10^{2}}\). (b) The first 5

MATHEMATICS
WAEC 1997

(a) Use logarithm tables to evaluate \(\frac{15.05 \times \sqrt{0.00695}}{6.95 \times 10^{2}}\).

(b) The first 5 students to arrive in a school on a Monday morning were 2 boys and 3 girls. Of these, two were chosen at random for an assignment. Find the probability that :

(i) both were boys ; (ii) the two were of different sexes.

Explanation

(a) \(\frac{15.05 \times \sqrt{0.00695}}{6.95 \times 10^{2}}\)

NoLog
15.05\(1.1775 = 1.1775\)
\(\sqrt{0.00695}\)\(\bar{3}.8420 \div 2 = \bar{2}.9210\)
= 0.0985
\(6.95 \times 10^{2}\) - 2.8420
Antilog = 0.001805 = \(\bar{3}.2565\)

\(\therefore \frac{15.05 \times \sqrt{0.00695}}{6.95 \times 10^{2}} \approxeq 0.00181\) (3 sig. figs)

(b) No of boys = 2, No of girls = 3

\(\therefore\) Total students = 5

(i) P(both are boys) = \(\frac{2}{5} \times \frac{1}{4} = \frac{1}{10}\)

(ii) P(both are of different sexes) = P(first a boy, then a girl) or P(first a girl, then a boy)

= \(\frac{2}{5} \times \frac{3}{4} + \frac{3}{5} \times \frac{2}{4} \)

= \(\frac{6}{20} + \frac{6}{20}\)

= \(\frac{12}{20} = \frac{3}{5}\)



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