sample space
A sample space is the set of all possible outcomes from an experiment..
The sample space of a coin and a die is [H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6].
no of possibilities for example tossind a fair coin then the cardinality of sample space is 2
The sample space consists of the following four outcomes: TT, TH, HT, HH
The sample space of a standard six sided die is [1,2,3,4,5,6].
There is only one possible outcome and that is 2. So the sample space is the number 2.
A subset of sample space is taking a sample from that sample space.
In order to determine the sample space, an actual description of the problem is needed. A number doesn't give the required information.
sample space
a small blood sample is taken, and DNA from it is analyzed to determine the CAG repeat number. A person with a repeat number of 30 or below will not develop HD.
The sample space is {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}: all the possible value that "The number of heads" can take.
true
It all depends on what you do with the information that you note. If you count up the number of odds [or evens] in the five rolls, your sample space is {0,1,2,3,4,5} with size 6. If you look for whether you had more odds than evens your sample space is {Y,N}, with size 2. If you subtract the number of even outcomes from the number of odd outcomes, your sample space is {-5,-4,,...,4,5} which is of size 11.
If the population is of size N, then you allocate the numbers 1 to N to them: one per element of the population. Then generate random numbers in the range 1 - N. The element whose number is thrown up by the generator is in the sample. In the unlikely event that a number is repeated, you ignore the repeat and continue drawing the sample until you have the required correct number in the sample.
The sample space of tossing a coin is H and T.
The sample space when flipping a coin is [heads, tails].