From - Mon Aug 17 18:41:02 1998 From: horst.kraemer@snafu.de (Horst Kraemer) Newsgroups: sci.stat.math Subject: Re: classical poisson process problem Date: Mon, 17 Aug 1998 14:28:21 GMT Message-ID: <35d7fd94.341134614@news.snafu.de> References: <6r2vr1$f0q$1@lwnws01.ne.highway1.com> Lines: 62 On Fri, 14 Aug 1998 23:38:09 -0400, "Arthur M. Schneiderman" wrote: >Trains arrive randomly at a station at an average rate of 1 per x minutes > or y per hour). > >(a) You arrive at the station and there is no train in sight. What is the >probability that the next train arrives in T minutes? > >(b) You arrive at the station just as a train pulls away. Now what is the >answer to (a). > >I remember this question on an exam I took 20 years ago. I also remember >that I got it wrong and didn't understand why. What I do remember is that >(b) considers the conditional probability given that the event just >occurred. Can anyone help me? Can anyone give me a reference? > >PS. No, it hasn't kept me up for 20 years. I need to know the answer for a >similar problem that I'm working on. By definition a process is a POISSON point process with intensity m (in your case for example m = 10, 10 trains per hour, the unit if T is "hours") if the probability that there are exactly k events (arrivals) in any interval [t0,t0+T] has a POISSON distribution with mean T*m. (mT)^k Pr(k) = ------- * exp (-mT) k! This distribution is the same for any t0 and any T>=0 and the distributions for disjoint time intervals [t0,t1], [t2,t3], t1