the frequency is less than OR EQUAL TO the cumulative frequency
hey u can choose any number from the frequency to find the assumed mean suppose u have 8 frequencies u can assume 4 as the mean
For discrete distributions, suppose the variable X takes the specific value x with probability P(X=x) Then add together x * P(X = x) for all possible values of x. For continuous distributions, suppose the probability distribution function of the variable X is f(x). Then the mean is the integral of x*f(x) with respect to x, taken over all possible values of x.
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it depends how tall you are and the size of your body.
how the heck im i suppose 2 no
the frequency is less than OR EQUAL TO the cumulative frequency
For the same speed of a wave (I suppose you are referring to electromagnetic waves), the highest frequency corresponds to the shortest wavelength.For the same speed of a wave (I suppose you are referring to electromagnetic waves), the highest frequency corresponds to the shortest wavelength.For the same speed of a wave (I suppose you are referring to electromagnetic waves), the highest frequency corresponds to the shortest wavelength.For the same speed of a wave (I suppose you are referring to electromagnetic waves), the highest frequency corresponds to the shortest wavelength.
10 Hz
The frequency of the waves reaching you is higher then.
Relative to the car, you are at rest. Relative to the road, you are moving if the car is in motion. Relative to the sun, you are moving with the Earth's rotation and orbit around the sun.
if he/she was your attorney no they can not represent your family members.well atleast not at the same time.atleast they are not suppose to!
The dollar will depreciate and the pound will appreciate.
Relative to the car you are motionless. Relative to the road you are moving at the speed of the car. Relative to the sun you are moving at the speed of Earth as it orbits the sun (30km a second).
The distribution of alleles in a population - APEX
I suppose the formula is: MUF=critical frequency/cosine(angle of incidence). ex:The MUF for an angle of incidence of 60 deg and a critical frequency of 60MHz will be MUF=60 * 10^6/cos(60) =120 MHz By VSR
Meaning: Proportion of times that an event occurs in the long run when the conditions are stable, or the observed relative frequency of an event in a very large number of trials. This method uses the relative frequencies of past occurrences as probabilities. We determine how often something has happened in the past and use that fi8gure to predict the probability that it will happen again in the future. For example, suppose that an accounts receivable manager knows from past data that about 70 of 1000 accounts usually become uncollectible after 120 days. The manager would estimate the probability of bad debts as 70/1000 = .07 or 7%. A second characteristic of probabilities established by the relative frequency of occurrence method can be shown by tossing one of our fair coins 300 times. Here we can see that although the proportion of heads was far from 0.5 in the first 100 tosses, it seemed to stabilize and approach 0.5 as the number of tosses increased. In statistical language, we would say that the relative frequency becomes stable as the number of tosses becomes large (if we are tossing the coin under uniform conditions). Thus when we use the relative frequency approach to establish probabilities, our probability figure will gain accuracy as we increase the number of observations. Of course, this improved accuracy is not free; although more tosses of our coin will produce a more accurate probability of heads occurring, we must bear the time and the cost of additional observations. One difficulty with the relative frequency approach is that people often use it without evaluating a sufficient number of outcomes. If you heard someone say, “My aunt and uncle got the flu this year, and they are both over 65, so everyone in that age bracket will probably get the flu,” you would know that your friend did not base his assumptions on enough evidence. His observations were insufficient data for establishing a relative frequency of occurrence probability.