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A class of 27 students needs to be divided into 9 teams of three students each? How many ways are there to
do that? Thank you. |
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This post was updated on Apr 28, 2014; 11:37am.
27!/((9!)^3!*3!)
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hey shefali.. can you pls elaborate.. the steps behind your ans.
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In reply to this post by rongmon
It will be (27!)/(3!)^9 i guess...its similar to the form of arrangements of 27 persons in to 9 groups of 3 each..e.g n things of which p, q and r are of different types can be arranged in (n!/p!*q!*r!) ways...just like that in this case the problem is arrangement of 27 students in to 9 types with three in each group...!!!
"I don't ride side-saddle. I'm as straight as a submarine"
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I go with Subhayu's answer. My logic is that it should be 27C3*24C3*21C3*18C3*15C3*12C3*9C3*6C3*3C3. It is easy to simplify it coz when you expand the C formula, a lot of terms cancel out and you get the same answer, ie, 27!/3!^9. Could you tell the right answer plz?
I dont understand the logic behind shefali's answer. |
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In reply to this post by Granpa Simpson
That is what i thought too.
Answer is stated as 27!/9!*(3!)^9 though. |
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I can't figure why the 9! term in the denominator.
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here we are dividing by 9! because all 9 groups are having same no. of persons.
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There is a definite formula for such a question when division into groups is asked. That is vandita On 28 Apr 2014 21:02, "ViV [via Discussion forum]" <[hidden email]> wrote:
here we are dividing by 9! because all 9 groups are having same no. of persons. |
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In reply to this post by rongmon
Answer is indeed 27!/[(3!^9)9!]
Let the set of students be {1, 2, 3, 4, ...., 27} Consider the following division into 9 teams {{1, 2, 3}, {4, 5, 6}, {7, 8, 9}, {10, 11, 12}, {13, 14, 15}, {16, 17, 18}, {19, 20, 21}, {22, 23, 24}, {25, 26, 27}} And compare it with {{4, 5, 6}, {1, 2, 3}, {7, 8, 9}, {10, 11, 12}, {13, 14, 15}, {16, 17, 18}, {19, 20, 21}, {22, 23, 24}, {25, 26, 27}} Note that above two are giving us same division of 27 people into 9 teams but they count as two different arrangements in 27!. Likewise there are 9! arrangements, all resulting in the same division. So, the number 27! must be divided by 9!. Also, Consider the following division into 9 teams again {{1, 2, 3}, {4, 5, 6}, {7, 8, 9}, {10, 11, 12}, {13, 14, 15}, {16, 17, 18}, {19, 20, 21}, {22, 23, 24}, {25, 26, 27}} And compare it with {{2, 1, 3}, {4, 5, 6}, {7, 8, 9}, {10, 11, 12}, {13, 14, 15}, {16, 17, 18}, {19, 20, 21}, {22, 23, 24}, {25, 26, 27}} Again the above two are two different arrangements in 27! but result in same team formations. Likewise, there are 3!^9 such arrangements that result in the same team formations. So, the number must also be divided by 3!^9. Thus, the correct answer is 27!/9!*(3!^9) |
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Thank you so much, Sir!
In nutshell, we should never forget that arrangement of teams doesn't matter, here! So, divide by 9! |
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In reply to this post by Amit Goyal
Thank you.
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In reply to this post by Shefali
I think u hv dn a silly mistake .And .should be 27!/[ (3!)^9*9! ]
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In reply to this post by rongmon
In case of division we multiply denominator by 9! and in case of distribution there is nothong
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