The probability of getting two prime numbers when two numbers are selected at random and without replacement, from 1 to 10 is 2/15.
there is no end to numbers so the probability is very high
Probability are the odds of something happening but has multiple answers. Such as probability of getting a 5 in a fair dice would be 1 out of 6 because there are 6 numbers on a dice altogether, and ONE chance of getting a 5 from the total of 6. Therefore, the probability of getting a 5 or any number from a dice would be 1/6.
There are infinitely many numbers and so the probability of the second event is 0. As a result the overall probability is 0.
The probability of getting a 2 on a six sided die is 1/6. The probability of rolling a 5 is 1/6 The probability that any of the six numbers will come up is 1/6. Probability is found by "the number of ways of getting the favorable event/the total number of possibilities". Since there is only one number 2 on a a die, then there is only one way to get the favorable event. The total number of sides on a die is 6, so there are six different possibilities total that can come up. So, probability of rolling a 2 is 1/6.
The first dice can show any of the eight numbers. If the dice are to show different numbers the second dice has 7 different numbers out of a possible 8 to chose from. So the probability is 7/8 or 0.875 or 87.5% chance.
The probability of getting two prime numbers when two numbers are selected at random and without replacement, from 1 to 10 is 2/15.
there is no end to numbers so the probability is very high
It is not possible to answer the question with no knowledge of the numbers on the sides.
Pr(Two different numbers) = 1 - Pr(Two same) = 1 - 1/6 = 5/6 = 83.3%
The probability is(the total number of numbers on the spinner minus 5)/(the total number of numbers on the spinner)Another way to express the same probability is1 - 5/(the total number of numbers on the spinner)
36 * 35 * 34 * 33 * 32 / 5 / 4 / 3 / 2 / 1 = 376,992. The probability is 1 in 376,992 or about 0.000002653.
That depends how many numbers it's possible to get.
Probability are the odds of something happening but has multiple answers. Such as probability of getting a 5 in a fair dice would be 1 out of 6 because there are 6 numbers on a dice altogether, and ONE chance of getting a 5 from the total of 6. Therefore, the probability of getting a 5 or any number from a dice would be 1/6.
About 98 percent.
There are infinitely many numbers and so the probability of the second event is 0. As a result the overall probability is 0.
The probability of getting a 2 on a six sided die is 1/6. The probability of rolling a 5 is 1/6 The probability that any of the six numbers will come up is 1/6. Probability is found by "the number of ways of getting the favorable event/the total number of possibilities". Since there is only one number 2 on a a die, then there is only one way to get the favorable event. The total number of sides on a die is 6, so there are six different possibilities total that can come up. So, probability of rolling a 2 is 1/6.