I'm doing a branching process problem and am not sure I did it correctly. Suppose $X_0 = 1$ and $p_0 = .5, p_1 = .1,$ and $p_3 = .4$ represent the probabilities that zero, one, and three individuals will be produced, respectively. There are two parts to the question:
a) Find $P(X_2 = 0 \mid X_1 > 0)$
b) Find $P(X_3 = 0 \mid X_2 > 0)$.
I imagine the solutions to these problems are very similar.
To solve part a), I first found the expected number of individuals produced by the zeroth generation to be $1.3$. Next, I found the extinction probability $a$ by solving the equation
$a = .5 + .1a + .4a^3,$
where $a$ came out to be roughly $0.725$. All I could think of doing was to solve for $P(X_2 = 0 \mid X_1 = E[X_1]),$ where $E[X_1] = 1.3.$ To solve this, I know that you can simply calculate $a^{1.3} = .658$. However, this doesn't feel like it's the right approach since it doesn't cover all possible values of $X_1$; it only takes into account the expected value at time $t = 1$. I figure one could correct this error by solving
$P(X_2 = 0 \mid X_1 > 0) = \frac{P(X_2 = 0 \cap X_1 > 0)}{P(X_1 > 0)} $
by Bayes' Theorem, but unfortunately I don't know how one would go about computing that. Is anything I have here at least remotely correct, or am I just throwing out jibber-jabber?
Side note: For part b), I raised the extinction probability to the expected number of individuals are time $t = 2$ $(E[X_2] = 2.6)$ and got $a^{2.6} = .433$. Again, I'm not so sure this is correct, but it was my best attempt.
Thanks!