Math 5010 - 1 Introduction to Probability January 9, 2009 M, W, F from 11:50 AM to 12:40 PM in LCB 225. Instructor: A. Treibergs, JWB 224, 581-­8350. Office Hours: 10:45-11:45 MWF (tent.) & by appt. E-mail: treiberg@math.utah.edu Homepage: http://www.math.utah.edu/~treiberg/M5010.html Notice: PhD students in departments other than mathematics wishing to get credit for this course should register under the number 6805. Mathematics PhD students cannot get 6000 level credit for this course. Text: David Stirzaker, Elementary Probability, 2nd. ed., Cambridge University Press, 2003. Prerequisites Math 2210 or 2520. (Basically, you'll need calculus through double integrals.) Grading Homework: To be assigned weekly. Homework, due Fridays, will be collected in class. Papers turned into my mailbox in the math mail room (JWB 228) by 5:00 PM Fridays will be regarded as being turned in on time. Homework that is late but not more than one week late will receive half credit. Homework that is more than one week late will receive no credit at all. Students are encouraged to work together on homework, although solutions should be written up individually. Copying is cheating. Exams: Exams will be open book: the text, your notes and a calculator are allowed. Other texts, laptops, text messengers will not be allowed. Exam problems will be modifications of homework problems. Midterms: There will be two in-class one-hour midterm exams on Wednesdays Feb. 11 and Apr. 1. Final Exam: Fri., May 1, 10:30 - 12:30. Half of the final will be devoted to material covered after the second midterm exam. The other half will be comprehensive. Students must take the final to pass the course. Course grade: Sum of two midterms 50% + HW 15% + final 35%. Withdrawals: Last day to drop class is Jan. 21. Last day to register is Jan 26. Until Mar. 6 you can withdraw from class with no approval at all. After that date you must petition your dean's office to be allowed to withdraw. ADA: The Americans with Disability Act requires that reasonable accommodations be provided for students with cognitive, systemic, learning and psychiatric disabilities. Please contact me at the beginning of the quarter to discuss any such accommodations you may require for this course. VIDEO CAMERA: The course is being recorded for transmission to remote students at ATK and elsewhere. Regular students who wish to view an individual lecture should send me an email with your name, email, and date of lecture you wish to view. I'll forward your request to Roanna Keough in Mechanical Engineering who will provide you with the lecture. * * * Objectives: To cover the elementary theory of probability. To develop problem solving skills. To practice writing a mathematical argument. To review calculus. Topics: We'll try to cover the first 8 chapters in the text, with lighter emphasis on Chapter 6. This will give you enough preparation for Math 5080 (mathematical statistics), Math 5040 (stochastic processes), and Math 5030 (actuarial mathematics). I Ch 1 (Probability): Sections 1-5, 8-10, 12 Ch 2 (Conditional Probability, Independence): Sections 1-3,6,7,11,12 II Ch 3 (Counting): Sections 1-4, 9, 10, 12, 15, 16 Ch 4 (Random Variables): Sections 1-4, 6 , 9, 10, 12, 13, III Ch 5 (Random Vectors): Sections 1-6, 8-9. Examples ??? Ch 6 (Generating Functions): Sections 1-4 (lightly), Examples ??? IV Ch 7 (Continuous RVs): Sections 1-2, 4-6, Examples??? V Ch 8 (Jointly Continuous RVs): Sections 1-7, 9, Examples ???