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6.4 #6.

Expected value of the lottery ticket will be the amount you receive in earnings minus the cost of buying the ticket.

The amount you earn depends, of course, on whether you win the lottery or not.

By the definition of expected value, we know that your expected earnings equal

P(win the lottery) * (your earnings if you win the lottery) + P(don't win the lottery) * (your earnings if you don't win).

But remember, expected value of the ticket is expected earnings minus the cost of the ticket.

Here's what we know so far: If you win, you get $10,000,000. If you don't win, you get $0.

What is the probability of winning the lottery?

There is 1 correct set of 6 numbers that you could choose (that's the numerator) and C(50, 6) different possibilities (that's the denominator).

So P(win) = 1 / C(50, 6), and now we also know P(don't win) = 1 - P(win) = [C(50, 6) - 1] / C(50, 6).

Substitute all this back into your expected earnings, and then remember to subtract the cost of the lottery ticket...

you get $10,000,000 * [1 / C(50, 6)] + 0 * {[C(50, 6) - 1] / C(50, 6)} - 1 = -.37.

Your lottery ticket's expected value is -37 cents.

Alumni Liaison

Ph.D. 2007, working on developing cool imaging technologies for digital cameras, camera phones, and video surveillance cameras.

Buyue Zhang