When you are dividing fractions you just flip the second fraction upside down and multiply the two fractions
So the first is
½ x 6/1 = 6/2 = 3
For the second you write them as improper fractions then do the same
So it is
3/2 / 1/8 = 3/2 x 8/1 = 24/2 = 12
So the answer to the first question is 3 and the second is 12
Step-by-step explanation:
P(black or yellow) = P(black) + P(yellow) − P(black and yellow)
P(black or yellow) = 1/25 + 1/5 − 0
P(black or yellow) = 6/25
Answer:
x = -2
Step-by-step explanation:
1. Square both sides
x^2 +3x + 6 = x^2
2. Subtract x^2 from both sides
3x + 6 = 0
3. Subtract 6 from both sides and divide by 3
x = -2
Answer:
3/50 7/50 40/50
Step-by-step explanation:
Ok. I'm not exactly a math wiz but I think you may be overthinking this. Experimental probability should be the probability from the experiment right. It's in the name. In chemistry if it's a well established value it's called a theoretical value or probability. So the answer should just be the probability from the said experiment. No other funky math terms are given here which clues me to the idea that it might just be this simple.