To find the probability that none of the flights will be overbooked based on Roger's results, we need to calculate the proportion of trials where the number of times a 1, 2, or 3 appears is 0.
From the table provided, we can see that there are 40 trials where the number of times a 1, 2, or 3 appears is 0.
To find the total number of trials, we sum up all the numbers in the "Number of trials" column:
Total number of trials = 40 + 68 + 55 + 26 + 9 + 2 + 0 + 0 + 0 + 0 + 0 = 200
Therefore, the probability that none of the flights will be overbooked is:
Probability
=
Number of trials where no overbooked flights
Total number of trials
×
100
Probability=
Total number of trials
Number of trials where no overbooked flights
×100
Probability
=
40
200
×
100
Probability=
200
40
×100
Probability
=
1
5
×
100
Probability=
5
1
×100
Probability
=
20
%
Probability=20%
So, based on Roger's results, the probability that none of the flights will be overbooked is 20%.