Airline Flights: No-Shows Based on long experience, an airline has found that about 6% of the people
Question:
Airline Flights: No-Shows Based on long experience, an airline has found that about 6% of the people making reservations on a flight from Miami to Denver do not show up for the flight. Suppose the airline overbooks this flight by selling 267 ticket reservations for an airplane with only 255 seats.
(a) What is the probability that a person holding a reservation will show up for the flight?
(b) Let n 5 267 represent the number of ticket reservations. Let r represent the number of people with reservations who show up for the flight.
Which expression represents the probability that a seat will be available for everyone who shows up holding a reservation?
P(255 # r); P(r # 255); P(r # 267); P(r 5 255)
(c) Use the normal approximation to the binomial distribution and part
(b) to answer the following question: What is the probability that a seat will be available for every person who shows up holding a reservation?
AppendixLO1
Step by Step Answer:
Understandable Statistics Concepts And Methods
ISBN: 9780357719176
13th Edition
Authors: Charles Henry Brase, Corrinne Pellillo Brase