The probability of drawing two Aces from a standard deck of 52 cards is 4 in 52 times 3 in 51, or 12 in 2652, or 1 in 221, or about 0.00452.
There are 4 aces in the deck the odds that the first card is an ace is 4/52 or 1/13. The odds the second card is an ace is 3/51 or 1/17 because there are only 3 aces and 51 cards left. The odds that both are aces are 1/13 times 1/17 which is 1/221.
If you are drawing only two cards, the probability that they will both be aces is one in 221. ( (52 / 4) * (51 / 3) ) If you are drawing all the cards in the deck, one at a time, the probability that you will draw at least two aces in a row is much better than that, but how much better I leave for someone else to answer.
Assuming a pack consists of 52 cards as per normal. Initially half the cards are red. Probability that the first card drawn is red = 1/2. Now there are 25 red cards left out of 51 remaining cards. Probability that the second card drawn is red = 25/51. Probability that both cards drawn are red therfore = 1/2 * 25/51 = 25/102
Both pair of cards were clubs and spades.
This is a probability case of statistics using the addition rule P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A and B). The output can happen at the same time, for that reason it is not mutually exclusive. The output can be an ace and a black card. first case: how many ace's we got=4 over the number of total cards=52 second case: how many black cards=26 over the total number of cards=52 BOTH cases: they can be just 2 cards that can be aces AND black. (4/52)+(26/52)-(2/52)= 7/13=.538461538462= .5385
There are 4 aces in the deck the odds that the first card is an ace is 4/52 or 1/13. The odds the second card is an ace is 3/51 or 1/17 because there are only 3 aces and 51 cards left. The odds that both are aces are 1/13 times 1/17 which is 1/221.
Two cards are drawn from a pack of 52 cards second card is drawn after replacing the first card. What is the probability that the second card is a king?
If you are drawing only two cards, the probability that they will both be aces is one in 221. ( (52 / 4) * (51 / 3) ) If you are drawing all the cards in the deck, one at a time, the probability that you will draw at least two aces in a row is much better than that, but how much better I leave for someone else to answer.
1-221
Assuming a pack consists of 52 cards as per normal. Initially half the cards are red. Probability that the first card drawn is red = 1/2. Now there are 25 red cards left out of 51 remaining cards. Probability that the second card drawn is red = 25/51. Probability that both cards drawn are red therfore = 1/2 * 25/51 = 25/102
To calculate the probability of a random selected poker hand containing exactly 3 aces given that it contains at least 2 aces, we first need to determine the total number of ways to choose a poker hand with at least 2 aces. This can be done by considering the different combinations of choosing 2, 3, or 4 aces from the 4 available in a standard deck of 52 cards. Once we have the total number of ways to choose at least 2 aces, we then calculate the number of ways to choose exactly 3 aces from the selected hand. Finally, we divide the number of ways to choose exactly 3 aces by the total number of ways to choose at least 2 aces to obtain the probability.
No, aces can be considered as both high cards and low cards in poker, depending on the game being played.
The probability of drawing two blue cards froma box with 3 blue cards and 3 white cards, with replacement, is 1 in 4, or 0.25.The probability of drawing one blue card is 0.5, so the probability of drawing two is 0.5 squared, or 0.25.
The probability of drawing a heart from a fair deck is 1 in 4. If the card is replaced then the probability is again 1 in 4. The probability of drawing a card other than a heart is 3 in 4. Once again if the card is replaced then the probability remains 3 in 4
The answer will depend on:whether the cards are drawn at random andwhether or not the first card is replaced before drawing the second.It also depends on how many times the experiment - of drawing two cards - is repeated. If repeated a sufficient number of times the probability will be so close to 1 as to make no difference from a certainty.
Both pair of cards were clubs and spades.
The first card can be anything. That means that there are 51 cards left and 39 of them are not the same suit as the first one, therefore P(not same suit) = 39/51 = 13/17.