Using the binomial distribution, it is found that there is a 0.7215 = 72.15% probability that between 10 and 15, inclusive, accidents involved drivers who were intoxicated.
For each fatality, there are only two possible outcomes, either it involved an intoxicated driver, or it did not. The probability of a fatality involving an intoxicated driver is independent of any other fatality, which means that the binomial distribution is used to solve this question.
Binomial probability distribution
[tex]P(X = x) = C_{n,x}.p^{x}.(1-p)^{n-x}[/tex]
[tex]C_{n,x} = \frac{n!}{x!(n-x)!}[/tex]
The parameters are:
In this problem:
The probability is:
[tex]P(10 \leq X \leq 15) = P(X = 10) + P(X = 11) + P(X = 12) + P(X = 13) + P(X = 14) + P(X = 15)[/tex]
Hence
[tex]P(X = x) = C_{n,x}.p^{x}.(1-p)^{n-x}[/tex]
[tex]P(X = 10) = C_{15,10}.(0.7)^{10}.(0.3)^{5} = 0.2061[/tex]
[tex]P(X = 11) = C_{15,11}.(0.7)^{11}.(0.3)^{4} = 0.2186[/tex]
[tex]P(X = 12) = C_{15,12}.(0.7)^{12}.(0.3)^{3} = 0.1700[/tex]
[tex]P(X = 13) = C_{15,13}.(0.7)^{13}.(0.3)^{2} = 0.0916[/tex]
[tex]P(X = 14) = C_{15,14}.(0.7)^{14}.(0.3)^{1} = 0.0305[/tex]
[tex]P(X = 15) = C_{15,15}.(0.7)^{15}.(0.3)^{0} = 0.0047[/tex]
Then:
[tex]P(10 \leq X \leq 15) = P(X = 10) + P(X = 11) + P(X = 12) + P(X = 13) + P(X = 14) + P(X = 15) = 0.2061 + 0.2186 + 0.1700 + 0.0916 + 0.0305 + 0.0047 = 0.7215[/tex]
0.7215 = 72.15% probability that between 10 and 15, inclusive, accidents involved drivers who were intoxicated.
A similar problem is given at https://brainly.com/question/24863377