Hint the hypergeometric distribution may be helpful in findi
(Hint: the hypergeometric distribution may be helpful in finding the final marginal p.m.f.)
Solution
[ the solution is given using MGF transformation]
X1~Bin(n1,p) X2~Bin(n2,p) X1 and X2 are independent
then MGF of X1 is M1(t)=(q+pet)n1 where q=1-p t be a real number
then MGF of X2 is M2(t)=(q+pet)n2
let Z=X1+X2
then MGF of Z is M(t)=M1(t)*M2(t) [as X1 and X2 are independent]
=(q+pet)n1+n2
but this is the mgf of a binomial distribution with parameters n1+n2 and p
and as MGF uniquely characterises a distribution hence X1+X2~Bin(n1+n2,p) [proved]
intuitive argument:
here X1 denotes the number of successes in n1 trials with probability of success p
and X2 denotes the number of successed in n2 trials with probability of success p
hence X1+X2 would be the total number of successes in n1+n2 trials
hence X1+X2 must follow Bin(n1+n2,p)
![(Hint: the hypergeometric distribution may be helpful in finding the final marginal p.m.f.)Solution[ the solution is given using MGF transformation] X1~Bin(n1,p (Hint: the hypergeometric distribution may be helpful in finding the final marginal p.m.f.)Solution[ the solution is given using MGF transformation] X1~Bin(n1,p](/WebImages/23/hint-the-hypergeometric-distribution-may-be-helpful-in-findi-1055337-1761550500-0.webp)