Suppose that a committee of 4 is to be chosen from 6 married couples. In how many ways can this be done? Of the possible committees how many contain exactly 2 women?
Of the possible committees how many contain at least 2 women?
Of the possible committees how many contain no married couple?
Of the possible committees how many contain at least 2 women?
Of the possible committees how many contain no married couple?
1 Answer
See below:
Explanation:
We have a committee of 4 people being chosen from a pool of 6 married couples. I'm going to assume that "married couple" means 1 man and 1 woman, and so we have 6 men and 6 women, or 12 people total.
We'll be using combinations because a committee with Andy, Barb, Clark, and Dave is the same as Dave, Clark, Barb, and Andy. The general formula is:
Total number of ways
Exactly 2 women
We'll pick 2 women from the 6 available and the same with the men, and so:
At least 2 women
We can add in the numbers of ways to have 3 and 4 women on the committee to the calculation above:
3 Women
4 Women
Summing up:
No married couple
For this one, we can pick one person from 4 of the married couples and no one from the other 2: