[tex]what \: is \: elementary \: event?[/tex]

[tex]what \: is \: elementary \: event?[/tex]

About the author
Emery

2 thoughts on “<br />[tex]what \: is \: elementary \: event?[/tex]<br /><br />​”

  1. Answer:

    Events or elementary events are what one calls the results of random experiments. When throwing a six-sided dice, for example, the elementary events are 1,2,3,4,5,6. When drawing a card from a deck of cards, the elementary events are the 32 different card values. The set of all elementary events is called an event set.

    Reply
  2. [tex] \implies \huge \tt \underline \red{answer}[/tex]

    In probability theory, an elementary event (also called an atomic event or sample point) is an event which contains only a single outcome in the sample space. … Elementary events and their corresponding outcomes are often written interchangeably for simplicity, as such an event corresponds to precisely one outcome.

    Reply

Leave a Comment