There are 4 numbers (7-10) which are greater than 6
→ pr(>6) = 4/10 = 2/5
pr(2 then 4) = pr(2) × pr(4) = 1/10 × 1/10 = 1/100
A spinner with equally likely outcomes is one that is divided into sections of equal size, where each section represents a distinct outcome. For example, a spinner divided into four equal sections numbered 1 to 4 has equally likely outcomes, as each number has the same probability of being landed on when spun. Other examples include spinners with sections colored differently or labeled with different symbols, provided each section is of equal area.
See the Basic Rules for Probability section in the related link.
There is 1 section numbered 1, 5 sections numbered 2 and 2 sections numbered 3.
It is the proportion of the spinner's perimeter that is occupied by the section (or sections) with a value of 1.
5/12 If it's wrong don't mind me, i'm not even in middle school yet i'm just smart
pr(2 then 4) = pr(2) × pr(4) = 1/10 × 1/10 = 1/100
They're numbered anti-clockwise from the lowest-numbered section on each level, i.e. section 1 on the first level, section 21 on the second level, and section 53 on the upper level.
A spinner with equally likely outcomes is one that is divided into sections of equal size, where each section represents a distinct outcome. For example, a spinner divided into four equal sections numbered 1 to 4 has equally likely outcomes, as each number has the same probability of being landed on when spun. Other examples include spinners with sections colored differently or labeled with different symbols, provided each section is of equal area.
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The transition probability is the likelihood that a particle will change from one state to another during a collision, whereas the cross section represents the effective area that the particle presents to a collision. The transition probability is related to the cross section by the formula: transition probability = cross section * particle flux, where the particle flux is the rate at which particles are incident on a target.
See the Basic Rules for Probability section in the related link.
the rows are lettered and the seats or numbered. but each section is the same thing.
4
There is 1 section numbered 1, 5 sections numbered 2 and 2 sections numbered 3.
"Section one" would refer to the first section of something that was divided into sections.
can silicon be divided into two section's pleas answer