no.
No. The probability of an outcome (or event) is always a number between 0 and 1.
Probability value can only be real number between 0 to 1, therefore, it cannot be greater than 1 or less than 0 or a complex number.
The probability, in a single random selection, is 1/20 or 0.05
The chances of picking a number between 2 to 5 is 4/10 if the numbers to be picked from are 1-10. However, if the numbers to be picked from are 1-100, then the probability drops to 4/100.
The answer depends on what the experiment is.
The probability is 8/20.
It is 3/13.
No. The probability of an outcome (or event) is always a number between 0 and 1.
The probability is 1/b.
no. because there are more composite numbers than prime numbers It depends on the place you choose to pick the prime number (e.g. 457 or 7577?). The bigger the number the less likely it is a prime.A formula gives the probability for a number being prime (Prime Number Theorem).
If the only numbers to pick from are 1 through 8, how can you get a factor greater than 10?
No.
The answer depends on whether the first number is replaced before picking the second. If not, the probability is 0.029
Although there are infinitely many primes, they become rarer and rarer so that as the number of numbers increases, the probability that picking one of them at random is a prime number tends to zero*. In the first 10 numbers there are 4 primes, so the probability of picking one is 4/10 = 2/5 = 0.4 In the first 100 numbers there are 26 primes, so the probability of picking one is 25/100 = 1/4 = 0.25 In the first 1,000 numbers there are 169 primes, so the probability of picking one is 168/1000 = 0.168 In the first 10,000 numbers there are 1,229 primes, so the probability of picking one is 0.1229 In the first 100,000 numbers there are 9592 primes, so the probability of picking one is 0.09592 In the first 1,000,000 numbers there are 78,498 primes, so the probability of picking one is 0.078498 In the first 10,000,000 numbers there are 664,579 primes, so the probability of picking one is 0.0664579 * Given any small value ε less than 1 and greater than 0, it is possible to find a number n such that the probability of picking a prime at random from the numbers 1-n is less than the given small value ε.
The probability of rolling a number greater than 6 on a die is 0.
Probability value can only be real number between 0 to 1, therefore, it cannot be greater than 1 or less than 0 or a complex number.
The probability that the number rolled, on a fair, six sided die, will be greater than 4 is 1/3.The probability that the number rolled, on a fair, six sided die, will be greater than 4 is 1/3.The probability that the number rolled, on a fair, six sided die, will be greater than 4 is 1/3.The probability that the number rolled, on a fair, six sided die, will be greater than 4 is 1/3.