To find the combined probability of rolling a 2 on a die and drawing a queen from a deck of cards, we multiply the individual probabilities of each event. The probability of rolling a 2 on a standard six-sided die is 1/6, while the probability of drawing a queen from a standard 52-card deck is 4/52, or 1/13. Thus, the combined probability is (1/6) * (1/13) = 1/78.
To find the probability of drawing a 5 from 10 cards numbered 1-10, the probability is 1/10, since there is one card with a 5 among ten cards. The probability of rolling a 2 on a number cube (which has 6 faces) is 1/6. To find the combined probability of both independent events occurring, you multiply the probabilities: (1/10) * (1/6) = 1/60. Thus, the probability of drawing a 5 and rolling a 2 is 1/60.
To find the probability of rolling a 5 on a die and drawing a jack from a deck of cards, you first calculate each probability separately. The probability of rolling a 5 on a six-sided die is ( \frac{1}{6} ), and the probability of drawing a jack from a standard 52-card deck is ( \frac{4}{52} = \frac{1}{13} ). Since these two events are independent, you multiply the probabilities: [ P(\text{5 and Jack}) = \frac{1}{6} \times \frac{1}{13} = \frac{1}{78}. ] Thus, the solution is ( \frac{1}{78} ).
The probability of drawing a pair from a standard deck of 52 cards is 3 in 51, or 1 in 17, or about 0.0588.
The probability of drawing a 10 out of 52 cards is 4 in 52, or 1 in 13, or about 0.07692.
The probability of drawing the first face card is 12 in 52. The probability of drawing the second is 11 in 51. The probability of drawing the third is 10 in 50. Thus, the probability of drawing three face cards is (12 in 52) times (11 in 51) times (10 in 50) or (1320 in 132600) or about 0.009955.
To find the probability of drawing a 5 from 10 cards numbered 1-10, the probability is 1/10, since there is one card with a 5 among ten cards. The probability of rolling a 2 on a number cube (which has 6 faces) is 1/6. To find the combined probability of both independent events occurring, you multiply the probabilities: (1/10) * (1/6) = 1/60. Thus, the probability of drawing a 5 and rolling a 2 is 1/60.
The probability of drawing a heart in a single random draw from a normal deck of playing cards and rolling a 4 on a fair number cube is: 1/4*1/6 = 1/24
To find the probability of rolling a 5 on a die and drawing a jack from a deck of cards, you first calculate each probability separately. The probability of rolling a 5 on a six-sided die is ( \frac{1}{6} ), and the probability of drawing a jack from a standard 52-card deck is ( \frac{4}{52} = \frac{1}{13} ). Since these two events are independent, you multiply the probabilities: [ P(\text{5 and Jack}) = \frac{1}{6} \times \frac{1}{13} = \frac{1}{78}. ] Thus, the solution is ( \frac{1}{78} ).
The probability of drawing a pair from a standard deck of 52 cards is 3 in 51, or 1 in 17, or about 0.0588.
The probability of drawing a 10 out of 52 cards is 4 in 52, or 1 in 13, or about 0.07692.
The probability of drawing the first face card is 12 in 52. The probability of drawing the second is 11 in 51. The probability of drawing the third is 10 in 50. Thus, the probability of drawing three face cards is (12 in 52) times (11 in 51) times (10 in 50) or (1320 in 132600) or about 0.009955.
The probability of drawing a 3 out of 52 cards is 4/52 or 1/13 or 0.0769 or 7.69%.
Probability of not drawing a black six from a deck of cards = 1 - probability of drawing a black 6 = 1 - 2/52 = 50/52 = 25/26.
The probability of drawing two cards that are a 2 when the first card is an Ace is zero, because a two is not an Ace. They are mutually exclusive events. If this is not clear, consider the probability of rolling a seven on one roll of one six sided die. That probability is also zero - it will not happen.
For a normal deck of cards, the answer is none.
The probability is one half.
The probability of drawing a diamond is a standard deck of 52 cards is 13 in 52, or 1 in 4, or 0.25.