Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
The probability that at least one of the events A and B occurs is 0.6. If A and B occur simultaneously with probability 0.2, then `P(barA) + P(barB)` is ______.
विकल्प
0.4
0.8
1.2
1.6
उत्तर
The probability that at least one of the events A and B occurs is 0.6. If A and B occur simultaneously with probability 0.2, then `P(barA) + P(barB)` is 1.2.
Explanation:
Given that: P(A ∪ B) = 0.6
P(A ∩ B) = 0.2
∴ P(A ∪ B) = P(A) + P(B) – P(A ∩ B)
⇒ 0.6 = P(A) + P(B) – 0.2
⇒ P(A) + P(B) = 0.6 + 0.2 = 0.8
And `1 - P(barA) + 1 - P(barB)` = 0.8
⇒ `P(barA) + P(barB)` = 2 – 0.8 = 1.2
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
A die is thrown. Describe the following events:
- A: a number less than 7
- B: a number greater than 7
- C: a multiple of 3
- D: a number less than 4
- E: an even number greater than 4
- F: a number not less than 3
Also find A ∪ B, A ∩ B, B ∪ C, E ∩ F, D ∩ E, A – C, D – E, E ∩ F', F'
Three coins are tossed once. Let A denote the event "three heads show", B denote the event "two heads and one tail show". C denote the event "three tails show" and D denote the event "a head shows on the first coin". Which events are
- mutually exclusive?
- simple?
- compound?
Two dice are thrown. The events A, B and C are as follows:
A: getting an even number on the first die.
B: getting an odd number on the first die.
C: getting the sum of the numbers on the dice ≤ 5
Describe the events
- A'
- not B
- A or B
- A and B
- A but not C
- B or C
- B and C
- A ∩ B' ∩ C'
In a single throw of a die describe the event:
A = Getting a number less than 7
In a single throw of a die describe the event:
B = Getting a number greater than 7
In a single throw of a die describe the event:
D = Getting a number less than 4
A and B are two events such that P (A) = 0.54, P (B) = 0.69 and P (A ∩ B) = 0.35. Find
P (A ∪ B).
A and B are two events such that P (A) = 0.54, P (B) = 0.69 and P (A ∩ B) = 0.35. Find
\[P (\bar{ A } \cap \bar{ B } )\]
A and B are two events such that P (A) = 0.54, P (B) = 0.69 and P (A ∩ B) = 0.35. Find
P (B ∩ \[\bar{ A } \] )
A natural number is chosen at random from amongst first 500. What is the probability that the number so chosen is divisible by 3 or 5?
An experiment consists of rolling a die until a 2 appears. How many elements of the sample space correspond to the event that the 2 appears on the kth roll of the die?
A team of medical students doing their internship have to assist during surgeries at a city hospital. The probabilities of surgeries rated as very complex, complex, routine, simple or very simple are respectively, 0.15, 0.20, 0.31, 0.26, .08. Find the probabilities that a particular surgery will be rated complex or very complex
A team of medical students doing their internship have to assist during surgeries at a city hospital. The probabilities of surgeries rated as very complex, complex, routine, simple or very simple are respectively, 0.15, 0.20, 0.31, 0.26, .08. Find the probabilities that a particular surgery will be rated neither very complex nor very simple
A team of medical students doing their internship have to assist during surgeries at a city hospital. The probabilities of surgeries rated as very complex, complex, routine, simple or very simple are respectively, 0.15, 0.20, 0.31, 0.26, .08. Find the probabilities that a particular surgery will be rated routine or complex
One urn contains two black balls (labelled B1 and B2) and one white ball. A second urn contains one black ball and two white balls (labelled W1 and W2). Suppose the following experiment is performed. One of the two urns is chosen at random. Next a ball is randomly chosen from the urn. Then a second ball is chosen at random from the same urn without replacing the first ball. Write the sample space showing all possible outcomes
A sample space consists of 9 elementary outcomes e1, e2, ..., e9 whose probabilities are
P(e1) = P(e2) = 0.08, P(e3) = P(e4) = P(e5) = 0.1
P(e6) = P(e7) = 0.2, P(e8) = P(e9) = 0.07
Suppose A = {e1, e5, e8}, B = {e2, e5, e8, e9}
Calculate P(A), P(B), and P(A ∩ B)
A sample space consists of 9 elementary outcomes e1, e2, ..., e9 whose probabilities are
P(e1) = P(e2) = 0.08, P(e3) = P(e4) = P(e5) = 0.1
P(e6) = P(e7) = 0.2, P(e8) = P(e9) = 0.07
Suppose A = {e1, e5, e8}, B = {e2, e5, e8, e9}
Using the addition law of probability, calculate P(A ∪ B)
A sample space consists of 9 elementary outcomes e1, e2, ..., e9 whose probabilities are
P(e1) = P(e2) = 0.08, P(e3) = P(e4) = P(e5) = 0.1
P(e6) = P(e7) = 0.2, P(e8) = P(e9) = 0.07
Suppose A = {e1, e5, e8}, B = {e2, e5, e8, e9}
List the composition of the event A ∪ B, and calculate P(A ∪ B) by adding the probabilities of the elementary outcomes.
Determine the probability p, for the following events.
An odd number appears in a single toss of a fair die.
Determine the probability p, for the following events.
A king, 9 of hearts, or 3 of spades appears in drawing a single card from a well-shuffled ordinary deck of 52 cards.
Determine the probability p, for the following events.
The sum of 6 appears in a single toss of a pair of fair dice.
If P(A ∪ B) = P(A ∩ B) for any two events A and B, then ______.
The probability of intersection of two events A and B is always less than or equal to those favourable to the event A.
The probability of an occurrence of event A is 0.7 and that of the occurrence of event B is 0.3 and the probability of occurrence of both is 0.4