The chance of student 1's birthday being individual is 365/365 or 100%.
Then the chance of student 2's birthday being different is 364/365.
Then it's narrowed down to 363/365 for student 3 and so on until you get all 10 students.
If you multiply all these values together, the probability would come out at around 0.88305182223 or 0.88.
To get all the same birthday you'd have to the chance of one birthday, 1/365 and multiply this by itself 10 times. This will produce a very tiny number. In standard form this would be 2.3827x10'-26 or in normal terms: 0.23827109210000000000000000, so very small.
Answer:
Since 7 and 11 are both rational, the sum and difference are rational.
Step-by-step explanation: It's A
Answer:
The answer is Option D:
<em>"The distribution of all values of the statistic resulting from all samples of size taken from the same population."</em>
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Step-by-step explanation:
First, is a distribution of all values. It has to include all the possible values of the statistic with its associated probability.
Second, is a distribution of a statistic because we are talking about sample results.
Third, it has to be taken from the same population and have to have the same sample size.
<span>Last week, Rosa ran 6 1/4 laps around the lake. Clara ran 1/5 as many laps around the lake as Rosa did. How many laps around the lake did Clara run?</span>