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You have a random variable X with variance 3. Now you multiply X with 2. What becomes the variance of X?

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Final answer:

The variance of a random variable X that originally has variance 3 becomes 12 after multiplying X by 2, because the scale factor's square is multiplied by the original variance.

Step-by-step explanation:

When you multiply a random variable X with a variance of 3 by 2, you are scaling the random variable. To find the new variance, you must square the scale factor and multiply it by the original variance.

Therefore, the new variance of X after multiplying by 2 is 2^2 × 3, which equals 12.

To clarify with a formula, if V(X) is the variance of X, and a is the scale factor,

then the variance of the new random variable aX is V(aX) = a^2V(X).

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User George Madrid
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