Ok if the probability of getting yellow is 9/16 then the prob of getting red is 7/16. If we got red 35 times during the experiment that means the number of tosses was 80.
Since 35/n = 7/16 where n = the number of tosses
Answer: n = 80 tosses
what do animals and plant depend on each other ?
The experimental probability for the die in question is 12/80 = 0.15
.5 chance of getting each question right.4 questions.5^4= .0625
You are asking a question about experimental probability. The problem with that type of question is that the answer is different each time you run the experiment. That's why we call it experimental probability. The outcome will be different each time you run the experiment.This is different than theoretical probability, where you can compute a probability based on some a priori knowledge of the conditions of the experiment. For instance, if you asked me what the probability of throwing a 3 or a 4 on a 12 number die, I could easily compute that as 2 in 12, or 1 in 6, or about 0.1667. Even multiple experiments can be predicted. For instance, if you asked me what was the probability of throwing a 3 or a 4 on a 12 number die three times in a row, I could also easily compute that as (2 in 12)3 or about 0.004630.Alas, experimental and theoretical probability part company and one does not assure the other, unless you run a very large number of tests but, even then, you only do what we call approachthe theoretical results with the experimental outcome.
Your question is a bit difficult to understand. I will rephrase it as follows: What is the probability of getting a head if a coin is flipped once? p = 0.5 What is the probability of getting 2 heads if a coin is flipped twice = The possible events are HT, TH, HH, TT amd all are equally likely. So the probability of HH is 0.25. What is the probability of getting at least on head if the coin is flipped twice. Of the possible events listed above, HT, TH and HH would satisfy the condition of one or more heads, so the probability is 3 x 0.25 = 0.75 or 3/4. Also, since the probability of TT is 0.25, and the probability of all events must sum to 1, then we calculate the probability of one or more heads to be 1-0.25 = 0.75
Two flips can have four possible results:T - TT - HH - TH - HThe question defines 'success' as either H-T or T-H.Two successes out of four possibilities = probability of 2/4 = 1/2 = 50% .
The probability from experimental outcomes will approach theoretical probability as the number of trials increases. See related question about 43 out of 53 for a theoretical probability of 0.50
The answer to the first question is 0.5. The answer to the second is not possible to work out.
The experimental probability for the die in question is 12/80 = 0.15
.5 chance of getting each question right.4 questions.5^4= .0625
You are asking a question about experimental probability. The problem with that type of question is that the answer is different each time you run the experiment. That's why we call it experimental probability. The outcome will be different each time you run the experiment.This is different than theoretical probability, where you can compute a probability based on some a priori knowledge of the conditions of the experiment. For instance, if you asked me what the probability of throwing a 3 or a 4 on a 12 number die, I could easily compute that as 2 in 12, or 1 in 6, or about 0.1667. Even multiple experiments can be predicted. For instance, if you asked me what was the probability of throwing a 3 or a 4 on a 12 number die three times in a row, I could also easily compute that as (2 in 12)3 or about 0.004630.Alas, experimental and theoretical probability part company and one does not assure the other, unless you run a very large number of tests but, even then, you only do what we call approachthe theoretical results with the experimental outcome.
Your question is a bit difficult to understand. I will rephrase it as follows: What is the probability of getting a head if a coin is flipped once? p = 0.5 What is the probability of getting 2 heads if a coin is flipped twice = The possible events are HT, TH, HH, TT amd all are equally likely. So the probability of HH is 0.25. What is the probability of getting at least on head if the coin is flipped twice. Of the possible events listed above, HT, TH and HH would satisfy the condition of one or more heads, so the probability is 3 x 0.25 = 0.75 or 3/4. Also, since the probability of TT is 0.25, and the probability of all events must sum to 1, then we calculate the probability of one or more heads to be 1-0.25 = 0.75
look when you put question up on connection academy please put the chart and your in the 6th grade too try yahoo answer
Two flips can have four possible results:T - TT - HH - TH - HThe question defines 'success' as either H-T or T-H.Two successes out of four possibilities = probability of 2/4 = 1/2 = 50% .
What is the probability that this question makes absolutely no sense? 1/1. or 100%
Zero
Probability questions are not all the same so there is not a single kind of answer: it depends on the nature of the question!
If the event in question is A and the probability of A occurring is P(A), then the probability of A not occurring is P(A')=1-P(A).