This is a followup to Bonanova's killville problem. I'll quote his statement of the problem here
"You live in Killville - a town populated by 10 killers and 10 pacifists.
When a pacifist meets a pacifist, nothing happens.
When a pacifist meets a killer, the pacifist is killed.
When two killers meet, both die.
Assume meetings always occur between exactly two persons
and the pairs involved are completely random."
These meetings continue until all killers are dead.
Now, you are an insurance underwriter. One of the pacifists come to you before joining Killville, and ask for a 1 million dollars insurance policy. In order to set the premium, you need to compute his chance of surviving Killville.
1) Compute the pacifist's chance of survival.
2) Compute the pacifist's chance of survival exactly ( simulation and approximation methods are not allowed) .
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bushindo
This is a followup to Bonanova's killville problem. I'll quote his statement of the problem here
"You live in Killville - a town populated by 10 killers and 10 pacifists.
When a pacifist meets a pacifist, nothing happens.
When a pacifist meets a killer, the pacifist is killed.
When two killers meet, both die.
Assume meetings always occur between exactly two persons
and the pairs involved are completely random."
These meetings continue until all killers are dead.
Now, you are an insurance underwriter. One of the pacifists come to you before joining Killville, and ask for a 1 million dollars insurance policy. In order to set the premium, you need to compute his chance of surviving Killville.
1) Compute the pacifist's chance of survival.
2) Compute the pacifist's chance of survival exactly ( simulation and approximation methods are not allowed) .
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