Advertisements
Advertisements
Question
Two coins are tossed once. Find the probability of getting
1) 2 heads
2) at least 1 tail.
Solution
When two coins are tossed, the sample space, S = {(H, H), (H, T), (T, H), (T, T)}
Thus, the total number of outcomes = 4
1) Let A be the event of getting 2 heads.
Thus, outcome favouring A is {(H, H)}
`∴ P(A) = 1/4`
2) Let B be the event of getting at least 1 tail
At least 1 tail means 1 tail or 2 tails.
The outcomes favouring B is {(H, T), (T, H), (T, T)}
`∴ P(B) = 3/4`
APPEARS IN
RELATED QUESTIONS
A bag contains 15 white and some black balls. If the probability of drawing a black ball from the bag is thrice that of drawing a white ball, find the number of black balls in the bag.
From a pack of 52 playing cards all cards whose numbers are multiples of 3 are removed. A card is now drawn at random.
1) a face card (King, Jack or Queen)
2) an even-numbered red card
Two different dice are thrown together. Find the probability that the numbers obtained have a product less than 16
A bag contains a certain number of red balls. A ball is drawn. Find the probability that the ball drawn is red.
A bag contains 10 red balls, 16 white balls and 8 green balls. A ball is drawn out of the bag at random. What is the probability that the ball drawn will be neither red nor green?
One card is drawn from a well-shuffled deck of 52 cards. Find the probability of getting the jack or the queen of the hearts.
A coin is tossed twice . what is the probability of getting
(i) no head
A perfect cubic die is thrown .Find the probability that
(ii) a perfect square comes up.
Two dice, one white and one red are rolled together .Find the probability of getting
(iii) a difference of 1
Which of the following cannot be the probability of an event?