10) A jury pool of consists of 50 potential jurors. In how many ways can a jury of 12 be selected?
10) A jury pool of consists of 50 potential jurors. In how many ways can a jury of 12 be selected?
10) A jury pool of consists of 50 potential jurors. In how many ways can a jury of 12 be selected?
2 Answers
Explanation:
We have:
50 choices for the first member,
49 choices for the second member,
....etc.
40 choices for the 11th member, and
39 choices for the 12th member.
If we want to keep the jurors in the order we picked them, we have
#color(white)= 50xx49xx48xx...xx40xx39#
#=(50!)/(38!)#
#=(50!)/((50-12)!)#
ways to create an ordered jury.
This can be written as
But, since order does not matter in this case (i.e. all jurors have the same "rank"), we need to divide this by the number of ways these 12 jurors can be ordered. That number is
The number of juries possible is then:
#color(white)= (50!)/(38!)-:12!#
#=(50!)/((50-12)!xx12!)#
This can be written as
Explanation:
Classic combinatorics problem. To enumerate the number of ways
Prime factorization and cancelling show that this is equal to