Probablity Maths Investigatory Project Class 12
Probablity Maths Investigatory Project Class 12
Probablity Maths Investigatory Project Class 12
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PROBABILITY
Probability Concepts
Theoretical Probability vs Relative
Frequency
Calculating Probabilities
Venn Diagrams
Intersection of Sets
Union of Sets
Mutually Exclusive Events
Inclusive Events
Complementary Events
Probability Games in Life 2
PROBABILITY CONCEPTS
Example: Tossing a coin twice The Coin Toss
Probability
The likelihood or chance of an event happening
E.g. Heads (50%) or Tails (50%)
Outcomes
The possible results of an experiment
E.g. Heads; Tails / Heads; Heads /
Sample Space
The set of all possible outcomes: S={HH,HT,TH,TT}
The number of outcomes: (S) = 4
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Types of Events
a) Certain events
These events will always happen.
E.g. If you toss a coin twice and the event is
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c) Equally likely events
Each event has an equally likely chance of happening.
Events are unbiased
E.g. If you toss a coin, there is 50% change of getting
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The probability scale
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THEORETICAL PROBABILITY VS
RELATIVE FREQUENCY
Theoretical Probability
When all outcomes of an activity are equally likely,
you can calculate the probability of an event happening
by using the following definition:
P(E) = number of favorable outcomes = n (E)
total number of possible outcomes
= n (S)
Probability of throwing a dice and getting a 4 is
P(4) = 1
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The Probability of an Event Marble Example
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Relative Frequency
n( A) 5
P ( A)
n( S ) 12
b) Event B= {drawing odd numbers} ={1,3,5,7,9,11}
n( B ) 6 1
P( B)
n( S ) 12 2 9
Example 2
The sample space is S = {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12}
n( E ) 12
P( E ) 1
n( S ) 12
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Example 3
Consider the word MATHEMATICS. A letter is chosen from this
word.
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EXERCISE
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3. A bag contains 6 blue marbles, 5 red marbles,
8 green marbles and 9 white marbles. What is the
probability of:
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4. A card is drawn from a pack of 52 cards.
Determine the probability of drawing:
(a) a heart.
(b) a jack of clubs
(c) an ace.
(d) a king or queen
(e) neither a heart or a spade.
S = {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12}.
Suppose that there are two events:
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UNION OF SETS
The union of A and B is an event consisting of all outcomes
that are in A or B.
Example
Determine the union of C and D.
C D ={l,2,3,6,9}
C or D ={1,2,3,6,9}
Here the numbers 4,5,7,8,10,11,12 are excluded from the
union of C and D. The number 1 and 3 appear in both set C
and D and are written only once in the union set.
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MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE EVENTS
Events with no elements in common. Event A and B exclude each
other. If A happens, then B cannot happen. Both cannot happen at the
same time.
Example
a) Find the intersection of A and B:
A B={}
B = { } empty set
A and
P(A B) = 0
union of A and B:
b) Find the
A B = {1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10;11;12}
A or B = {1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10;11;12}
P(A
B) = P(A) + P(B) – P( A B)
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INCLUSIVE EVENTS
Events with elements in common.
Example
a) Find the intersection of C and D:
C D = {1;3}
C and D = {1;3 }
= B = {7;8;9;10;11;12}
P(A) + P(A')= 1
b) Find the complement of B.
B = {7;8;9;10;11;12}
= A = {1;2;3;4;5;6}
P(B) + P(B')= 1 …. P (not B) = 1 - P(B)
Complex Venn Diagrams
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