bonanova Posted June 15, 2019 Report Share Posted June 15, 2019 A deck of cards is shuffled and dealt face up in a single row. A second deck is shuffled and dealt face up in a single row beneath the first row, making 52 coloumns each containing two cards. On average, how many pairs of cards will match? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
2 Thalia Posted June 18, 2019 Report Share Posted June 18, 2019 I've always struggled with this kind of probability but... If you pull a card from each deck, the odds of a match are 1/52. Doesn't that mean that out of 52 attempts, there should be an average of 1 match? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1 MikeD Posted June 18, 2019 Report Share Posted June 18, 2019 Spoiler If both decks had one card then the average would be 1 pair (100%) if there were two cards then the average would be 1 pair (50% = 2 and 50% = 0) if there were three cards then the average would be 1 pair (16.7% = 3 pairs, 50% = 1, and 33.3% = 0) and so on, so in a deck of 52 cards the average would still only be 1 pair. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1 bonanova Posted June 20, 2019 Author Report Share Posted June 20, 2019 @Thalia and @MikeD, two good approaches, same right answer. Kudos. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 flamebirde Posted June 15, 2019 Report Share Posted June 15, 2019 (edited) Spoiler So the chances that the first two will match is 1/52. That much should be fairly obvious I think. If they do, then the chances of the next two matching is 1/51, and if they do then the chances of the next two are 1/50, and so on. If a pair doesn't match, then we're looking at an issue -- at least one more pair is guaranteed not to match... but there's some finicky stuff going on there, since you could have a loop of 3 or more unmatched pairs if it chains down a bit. So at minimum if you draw a non-matching card then you have at least 2 unmatched pairs right there and potentially more. Not to mention that you could spawn different "loops" in one run through. if a pair doesn't match, then the chances of the next pair matching are... what? That's where the riddle lies next I guess. If we number the first deck 1-52 and the second 1'-52' and the very first pair is 1-2', then we know that the next pair (the one starting with 2-) must also not match. Then there's a 1/51 chance that the loop ends there -- a 1/51 chance that the next pair is 2-1', in which case the probabilities continue as before. But there's also a 50/51 chance that the chain extends, and we draw something like 2-5', which means that now the fifth pair (the one starting with 5-) is guaranteed to be a non-match with a 1/45 chance of terminating. I'm sure there's an easier way to think about it, but I'm gonna let it percolate through the back of my head for now. Seems similar to that airplane seating problem a while back, I'll see if I can't find and link it here. Edit: here it is: Edited June 15, 2019 by flamebirde Found the thread I was talking about. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 andaviking@gmail.com Posted June 16, 2019 Report Share Posted June 16, 2019 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 bonanova Posted June 17, 2019 Author Report Share Posted June 17, 2019 Clue: Spoiler Does it matter that the first deck was shuffled? Big clue: Spoiler Are the chances different for different pairs? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Question
bonanova
A deck of cards is shuffled and dealt face up in a single row. A second deck is shuffled and dealt face up in a single row beneath the first row, making 52 coloumns each containing two cards. On average, how many pairs of cards will match?
Link to comment
Share on other sites
6 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.