an outcome
It is the probability distribution.
Binomial distribution is learned about in most statistic courses. You could use them in experiments when there are two possible outcomes and each experiment is independent.
Is the number of all possible outcomes of an experiment. The number depends on the experiment.
A binomial experiment is a probability experiment that satisfies the following four requirements:1. Each trial can have only two outcomes or outcomes that can be reduced to two outcomes. These outcomes can be considered as either success or failure.2. There must be a fixed number of trials.3. The outcomes of each trial must be independent of each other.4. The probability of a success must remain the same for each trial.
You carry out an experiment a number of times. You make a list of all possible outcomes and record the number of times that outcome occurred.
When you have a model that describes the required situation well enough so that you can use scientific laws to calculate the probabilities of the outcomes of the experiment.
No it is a "discrete" distribution because the outcomes can only be integers.
It is the set of all possible outcomes of the experiment.
Not quite. The listing must also be exhaustive: it must contain all possible outcomes.For the roll of a fair cubic die, consider the following:Prob(1) = 1/6Prob(2) = 1/6This is a mutually exclusive listing of the outcomes of the experiment and the corresponding probabilities of occurrence but it is not a probability distribution because it does not include all possible outcomes. As a result, the total of the listed probabilities is less than 1.
2
Variable
1