A farmer is happy about the splendor of flowers on his land and wants to know how many dandelions are currently blooming on his meadow.
- He knows that the meadow has an area of $5000$ square meters and he also knows from the agricultural school that the number of flowers in a small area is always Poisson distributed.
- He stakes out ten squares, each with an edge length of $\text{25 cm}$, randomly distributed over the entire meadow and counts the flowers in each of these squares:
- $$\rm 3, \ 4, \ 1, \ 5, \ 0, \ 3, \ 2, \ 4, \ 2, \ 6.$$
Consider these numerical values as random results of the discrete random variable $z$.
It is obvious that the sample size $(10)$ is very small but – this much is revealed – the farmer is lucky. First consider how you would proceed to solve this task, and then answer the following questions.
Hints:
- This exercise belongs to the chapter Poisson Distribution.
- Reference is also made to the chapter Moments of a Discrete Random Variable.
Questions
Solution
(1) The linear mean of these ten numbers gives
- $$\underline{m_z = 3}.$$
(2) For the second moment of the random variable $z$ applies accordingly:
- $$m_{\rm 2\it z}=\frac{1}{10}\cdot (0^2+1^2+ 2\cdot 2^2+ 2\cdot 3^2+2\cdot 4^2+ 5^2+6^2)=12.$$
- According to Steiner's theorem, the variance is:
- $$\sigma_z^2 =12 -3^2 = 3,$$
- and thus the standard deviation:
- $$\underline{\sigma_z \approx 1.732}.$$
(3) Correct are solutions 1, 2, and 4:
- Mean and standard deviation agree here. This is indicative of the Poisson distribution with rate $\lambda = 3$
(equal to the mean and equal to the variance, not equal to the standard deviation). - Naturally, it is questionable to make this statement on the basis of only ten values.
- However, in the case of moments, a smaller sample number is less serious than, for example, in the case of probabilities.
(4) In total, there are $80000$ such squares, each with three flowers in the mean.
- This suggests a total of $\underline{B = 240}$ thousand flowers.
(5) According to the Poisson distribution, this probability results in
- $${\rm Pr}(z = 0) = \frac{3^0}{0!} \cdot{\rm e}^{-3}\hspace{0.15cm}\underline{\approx 5\%}.$$
- However, the small sample size $N = 10$ on which this task was based would have indicated probability ${\rm Pr}(z = 0) = { 10\%}$
since only in a single square no single flower was counted.