In that case, the events are said to be independent.
The events are independent.
Two events complementary when one event occurs if and only if the other does not. Simple event do not depend on other events, it consists of on and only one outcome Doctor Chuck aka mathdoc Two events complementary when one event occurs if and only if the other does not. Simple event do not depend on other events, it consists of on and only one outcome Doctor Chuck aka mathdoc
Given any event, the complementary event consists of all other possible outcomes.Given any event, the complementary event consists of all other possible outcomes.Given any event, the complementary event consists of all other possible outcomes.Given any event, the complementary event consists of all other possible outcomes.
Answer this question… one event directly triggers the other.
fossil
Since there are 6 sides on every die that are equally likely to be rolled, the probability of rolling any given side once is exactly 1/6. The 2 events or the first and second dice roll are independent (the outcome of one does not influence the other) so to find the probability of both occurring you just multiply the probability of each event. Since each event has a 1/6 probability of occurring as stated before, The entire event has a probability of 1/6*1/6 or 1/36, which is approximately 2.78%.
Dependent event :)
Independent events.
Independent events.
Two events are said to be independent if the outcome of one event does not affect the outcome of the other. Their probabilities are independent probabilities. If the events are not independent then they are dependent.
The occurrence of one event does not affect the occurrence of the other event. Take for example tossing a coin. The first toss has no affect on the outcome of the second toss, so these events are independent.
One-way independence.
Dependent events.
The outcome of either event does not depend on the outcome of the other.
Two events complementary when one event occurs if and only if the other does not. Simple event do not depend on other events, it consists of on and only one outcome Doctor Chuck aka mathdoc Two events complementary when one event occurs if and only if the other does not. Simple event do not depend on other events, it consists of on and only one outcome Doctor Chuck aka mathdoc
Independent
If two events are independent of one another, then the outcome of one event does not depend on the outcome of the other event. Example is flipping of two coins. The second coin is not dependent on the outcome of the first flip. But if you want to know if the two coins are the same (either both heads or both tails), then that outcome is dependent on the first coin and the second coin.
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.