A disjoint event is an event that can not happen at the same time
No.
If two events are disjoint, they cannot occur at the same time. For example, if you flip a coin, you cannot get heads AND tails. Since A and B are disjoint, P(A and B) = 0 If A and B were independent, then P(A and B) = 0.4*0.5=0.2. For example, the chances you throw a dice and it lands on 1 AND the chances you flip a coin and it land on heads. These events are independent...the outcome of one event does not affect the outcome of the other.
Event A denotes the complement of event A, meaning that Ā consists of all outcomes in which event A does not occur. Event A and Ā must be disjoint, because it is impossible for an event and its complement to occur at the same time.
Yes,Because not all disjoint no equivalent other have disjoint and equivalent
Not necessarily. For a counterexample, A and C could be the same set.
Two sets are said to be "disjoint" if they have no common element - their intersection is the empty set. As far as I know, "joint" is NOT used in the sense of the opposite of disjoint, i.e., "not disjoint".
Two sets are said to be "disjoint" if they have no common element - their intersection is the empty set. As far as I know, "joint" is NOT used in the sense of the opposite of disjoint, i.e., "not disjoint".
If they are disjoint faces, then 6*4 = 24 vertices.If they are disjoint faces, then 6*4 = 24 vertices.If they are disjoint faces, then 6*4 = 24 vertices.If they are disjoint faces, then 6*4 = 24 vertices.
Two sets are considered disjoint if they have no elements in common.
Multiply the possible outcomes of the events in the disjoint events
Sets are not disjants, they are disjoint. And two sets are disjoint if they have nothing in common. For example, the set {1,3,5} has nothing in common with the set {2,4,6}. So they are disjoint.