Answer:
P(A) = 2/6
P(A’) = 4/6
Step-by-step explanation:
In probability theory, the complement of any event A is the event [not A], i.e. the event that A does not occur. The event A and its complement [not A] are mutually exclusive and exhaustive. Generally, there is only one event B such that A and B are both mutually exclusive and exhaustive; that event is the complement of A. The complement of an event A is usually denoted as A′, Aᶜ, ¬A or A. Given an event, the event and its complementary event define a Bernoulli trial: did the event occur or not?
Our complement, A’, would then be “rolls a 1, 2, 3, or 4.” We can illustrate this as follows: The event “rolling a 5 or 6” and its complement “rolling a 1, 2, 3, or 4.”
Answer:
(x+1)(x-1)(x+3)(x-3)
Step-by-step explanation:
x4-10x^2+9
Group expression so that the coefficients of the x^2 terms add up to +9.
= x^4 -9x^2 - x^2+9
match coefficients in both groups
= x^4 -9x^2 - (x^2-9)
factor each group
= x^2 (x^2-9) - 1(x^2-9)
now factor out the common factor (x^2-9)
= (x^2-1)(x^2-9)
Finally, factor each quadratic factor
= (x+1)(x-1)(x+3)(x-3)
Answer:
Blue = y+2 = 3
Red = y+2x = 3
Step-by-step explanation:
25.59- 9.99= 15.60
15.60/ 0.05 = 312
312 minutes this month