The are 52 possible outcomes if you pick a card from a deck of 52.
To represent all possible combinations of tossing a coin and drawing a card from a standard deck, you need to consider both events. Tossing a coin has 2 outcomes (heads or tails), and drawing a card from a standard deck has 52 outcomes. Therefore, the total number of combinations is 2 (coin outcomes) multiplied by 52 (card outcomes), resulting in 104 leaves on the tree diagram.
There are 52 outcomes.
To determine the number of leaves on a tree diagram representing all possible combinations of tossing a coin and drawing a card from a standard deck of cards, we first note that there are 2 possible outcomes when tossing a coin (heads or tails) and 52 possible outcomes when drawing a card. Therefore, the total number of combinations is 2 (coin outcomes) multiplied by 52 (card outcomes), resulting in 104 leaves on the tree diagram.
When you toss a coin, there are 2 possible outcomes: heads or tails. A standard deck of cards contains 52 cards, so there are 52 possible outcomes when drawing a card. To find the total number of possibilities when both events occur, you multiply the outcomes: 2 (coin) × 52 (cards) = 104 total possibilities.
There are 1716 of them.
There are 52 outcomes.
52 x 6 if it is a six sided die.
eleventeen
There are 1716 of them.
As rolling the die does not affect the card drawn, the two events are independent. Assuming a standard 6-sided die and a standard deck without jokers, then there are 6 × 52 = 312 possible outcomes.
There are 2,598,960 5-card hands. This is combinatorials, which is used in probability but is not probability itself.
Just one. After that you no longer have a card deck.
There are 36 possible outcomes.
There are 25 = 32 possible outcomes.
There are 23 = 8 possible outcomes.
There are 26 = 64 possible outcomes.
There are 26 = 64 possible outcomes.