We have a deck of $n$ cards. We draw cards from it uniformly at random with replacement. After $2n$ draws what is the expected number of cards never chosen?
This question is part 2 of problem 2.12 in
M. Mitzenmacher and E. Upfal, Probability and Computing: Randomized Algorithms and Probabilistic Analysis, Cambridge University Press, 2005.
Also, for what it's worth, this is not a homework problem. It's self-study and I'm just stuck.
My answer thus far is:
Let $X_i$ be the number of distinct cards seen after the $i$th draw. Then:
$E[X_i] = \displaystyle \sum_{k=1}^{n} k (\frac{k}{n}P(X_{i-1}=k) + \frac{n-k-1}{n} P(X_{i-1}=k-1))$
The idea here is that each time we draw, we either draw a card we've seen or we draw a card we have not seen, and that we can define this recursively.
Finally, the answer to the question, how many have we not seen after $2n$ draws, will be $n-E[X_{2n}]$.
I believe this is correct, but that there must be a simpler solution.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.