3/6 * 3/5 = 6/30 or 1/5 so you have a 20% chance of pulling a white and then black marble.
3/5 or .6
None, if all the marbles that you have are yellow!
The theoretical probability of randomly picking each color marble is the number of color marbles you have for each color, divided by the total number of marbles. For example, the probability of selecting a red marble is 3/20.
The answer is dependent on whether of not you replace the marbles in the jar. If you do, the probability of drawing a red marble is 9 in 15 or 60%, every time. If you do not replace the marbles, the probability of drawing a red marble is 2 in 8 or 25%.
A bag of marbles contains 13 marbles. 5 Blue, 3 Yellow, 4 Green and 1 Red. Leave all answers as a ratio in lowest terms. 18 points On a single draw, what is the probability of drawing a yellow marble? What is the probability of not drawing a yellow marble? What are the odds in favor of drawing a blue marble? What is the probability of drawing a red or yellow marble? What is the probability of drawing a purple marble? If you had to bet on drawing a marble of a certain color what color would you not choose?
3/5 or .6
Suppose probability of drawing a red marble is p. Then p = 2*(1 - p) that is p = 2 - 2p or p = 2/3 So 2/3 of the 24 marbles are red 24*(2/3) = 16 red marbles.
Probability of drawing a red marble = 4/16 = 1/4 Probability of drawing not a red marble = 1 - 1/4 = 3/4
To determine the probability of getting a green marble, you need to know the total number of marbles and the number of green marbles specifically. The probability is calculated by dividing the number of green marbles by the total number of marbles. For example, if there are 5 green marbles out of 20 total marbles, the probability would be 5/20, which simplifies to 1/4 or 25%.
To calculate the probability of not drawing a green marble, first determine the total number of marbles and the number of green marbles. The probability of not drawing a green marble is then given by the ratio of the number of non-green marbles to the total number of marbles. This can be expressed as: [ P(\text{not green}) = \frac{\text{Number of non-green marbles}}{\text{Total number of marbles}}. ] Without specific numbers, the exact probability cannot be computed.
None, if all the marbles that you have are yellow!
probability of pulling out a purple marble = 20/85probability of NOT pulling out a purple marble = 1 - 20/85 = 65/85 = 13/17
7/15 for blue marbles and 8/14 for the purple marbles this is dependent probability
The theoretical probability of randomly picking each color marble is the number of color marbles you have for each color, divided by the total number of marbles. For example, the probability of selecting a red marble is 3/20.
it depends how many blue marbles there are and how many marbles total.
The theoretical probability of randomly drawing a green marble can be calculated by dividing the number of green marbles by the total number of marbles in the bag. In this case, there are 12 green marbles out of a total of 5 red marbles + 8 blue marbles + 12 green marbles, which is 25 marbles in total. Therefore, the theoretical probability of drawing a green marble is 12/25 or 48%.
The answer is dependent on whether of not you replace the marbles in the jar. If you do, the probability of drawing a red marble is 9 in 15 or 60%, every time. If you do not replace the marbles, the probability of drawing a red marble is 2 in 8 or 25%.