If the following is a probability distribution function: #f(x)=k(1/x^2)#, what is k and what is the variance?

1 Answer
May 16, 2016

The Trick is to define the proper domain of the density.
#f_k(x)=k/(x^2) AA x>k#, #f_k(x)=0# otherwise. With that useful restriction you can determine, that every #k>0# works.

Explanation:

Now the Integration is a piece of cake and the density fulfills the two properties for a density function:

  1. #f(x)>0 AA x#
  2. #int_k^oof(x)dx=1#

#int_k^ook/x^2dx=[-k/x|_k^oo]=lim_(x->oo)(-1/x)-(-k/k)=1#.

The expected value #E(X)=oo#, hence also the variance #V(X)=oo#.