Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
100 students appeared for two examination, 60 passed the first, 50 passed the second and 30 passed both. Find the probability that a student selected at random has passed at least one examination.
Advertisements
उत्तर
Let S be the sample space associated with the experiment of students who appeared for two examination.
Then n(S) = 100
∴ Total number of elementary events = 100
Consider the following events:
A = students passed in first examination
B = students passed in second examination
Then n(A) = 60 and n(B) = 50 and n(A ∩ B) = 30
P (A ∪ B) = P(A) + P (B) -P (A ∩ B)
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
If `2/11` is the probability of an event, what is the probability of the event ‘not A’.
In an entrance test that is graded on the basis of two examinations, the probability of a randomly chosen student passing the first examination is 0.8 and the probability of passing the second examination is 0.7. The probability of passing at least one of them is 0.95. What is the probability of passing both?
A dice is thrown. Find the probability of getting:
2 or 4
In a simultaneous throw of a pair of dice, find the probability of getting a doublet of prime numbers
In a simultaneous throw of a pair of dice, find the probability of getting a sum greater than 9
In a simultaneous throw of a pair of dice, find the probability of getting an even number on first
In a simultaneous throw of a pair of dice, find the probability of getting neither 9 nor 11 as the sum of the numbers on the faces
In a simultaneous throw of a pair of dice, find the probability of getting a sum more than 6
In a simultaneous throw of a pair of dice, find the probability of getting a sum more than 7
In a simultaneous throw of a pair of dice, find the probability of getting a total of 9 or 11
In a simultaneous throw of a pair of dice, find the probability of getting a total greater than 8.
In a single throw of three dice, find the probability of getting a total of 17 or 18.
Three coins are tossed together. Find the probability of getting exactly two heads
Three coins are tossed together. Find the probability of getting at least two heads
Two dice are thrown. Find the odds in favour of getting the sum 4.
What are the odds in favour of getting a spade if the card drawn from a well-shuffled deck of cards? What are the odds in favour of getting a king?
A box contains 10 red marbles, 20 blue marbles and 30 green marbles. 5 marbles are drawn at random. From the box, what is the probability that all are blue?
A box contains 6 red marbles numbered 1 through 6 and 4 white marbles numbered from 12 through 15. Find the probability that a marble drawn is white .
A box contains 6 red marbles numbered 1 through 6 and 4 white marbles numbered from 12 through 15. Find the probability that a marble drawn is white and odd numbered .
Fill in the blank in the table:
| P (A) | P (B) | P (A ∩ B) | P(A∪ B) |
| 0.35 | .... | 0.25 | 0.6 |
If A and B are two events associated with a random experiment such that P(A) = 0.3, P (B) = 0.4 and P (A ∪ B) = 0.5, find P (A ∩ B).
There are three events A, B, C one of which must and only one can happen, the odds are 8 to 3 against A, 5 to 2 against B, find the odds against C
One of the two events must happen. Given that the chance of one is two-third of the other, find the odds in favour of the other.
In a single throw of two dice, find the probability that neither a doublet nor a total of 9 will appear.
Find the probability of getting 2 or 3 tails when a coin is tossed four times.
One of the two events must occur. If the chance of one is 2/3 of the other, then odds in favour of the other are
The probability that a leap year will have 53 Fridays or 53 Saturdays is
A and B are two events such that P (A) = 0.25 and P (B) = 0.50. The probability of both happening together is 0.14. The probability of both A and B not happening is
If the probability of A to fail in an examination is \[\frac{1}{5}\] and that of B is \[\frac{3}{10}\] . Then, the probability that either A or B fails is
Two dice are thrown simultaneously. The probability of getting a pair of aces is
Five persons entered the lift cabin on the ground floor of an 8 floor house. Suppose that each of them independently and with equal probability can leave the cabin at any floor beginning with the first, then the probability of all 5 persons leaving at different floor is
One mapping is selected at random from all mappings of the set A = {1, 2, 3, ..., n} into itself. The probability that the mapping selected is one to one is
