yes because a quarter has 2 sides but flipping it you dont have a 100%chance if it lands on the same side
A probability assignment.
It is the outcome space.
sample space
theoretical probability is one half experimental probability is four tenths this is because to find theoretical probability you need to do number of outcomes you were looking for over the number of outcomes possible experimental probability is number of turns that were what you were looking for over the number of turns
sample space
Yes
Probability determined as part of an experiment is called experimental probability. Probability determined by analysis of all of the possible and expected outcomes is called theoretical probability.
Experimental or empirical probability is estimated from repeated trials of an experiment. However, instead of actually carrying out the experiment a very large number of times, it may be possible to simulate them.
A probability distribution describes the likelihood of different outcomes in a random experiment. It shows the possible values of a random variable along with the probability of each value occurring. Different probability distributions (such as uniform, normal, and binomial) are used to model various types of random events.
yes. for example role a 6 sided die, will you get a 7? never. the experimental and theoretical probability is 0
Experimental or empirical probability.
Absolutely not. Experimental is practical and theoretically anything is possible.
A probability assignment.
It is the outcome space.
It is the probability distribution.
sample space
1 out of 2