You draw two cards from a standard deck of 52 cards and replace the first one before drawing the second. Find the probability of drawing a king and a 5 in either order. Round your answer to the nearest thousandth.
a. |
0.012 |
|
b. |
0.037 |
|
c. |
0.056 |
|
d. |
0.078 |
|
e. |
0.311 |
You draw two cards from a standard deck of 52 cards and replace the first one...
You draw two cards from a standard deck of 52 cards, but before you draw the second card, you put the first one back and reshuffle the deck. (Round your answer to three decimal places) 1) Find P(Ace on first card and Red card on second card) 2) Find P(Ace and King in either order) 3) If you do not replace the first card before drawing the second card, Find P(Ace on first card and King on second card)
DETAILS BBBASICSTATBACC 5.2.023. 10. (1.47/5.88 Points) You draw two cards from a standard deck of 52 cards, but before you draw the second card, you put the first one back and reshuffle the deck. (a) Are the outcomes on the two cards independent? Why? No. The probability of drawing a specific second card depends on the identity of the first card. Yes. The probability of drawing a specific second card is the same regardless of the identity of the first...
you draw two cards from a standard deck of 52 cards and do not replace the first card before you draw a second. What is the probability the first card is a three of spades and the second card is a spade?
The following question involves a standard deck of 52 playing cards. In such a deck of cards there are four suits of 13 cards each. The four suits are: hearts, diamonds, clubs, and spades. The 26 cards included in hearts and diamonds are red. The 26 cards included in clubs and spades are black. The 13 cards in each suit are: 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, Jack, Queen, King, and Ace. This means there are four...
Suppose you are going to draw two cards from a standard deck of 52 cards. If you want to compute the probability that the first card is an Ace and the second card is a King, then you apply the ____ rule in probability: Select one: a. joint b. addition d. multiplication
In a standard deck of cards (52 cards), suppose you draw one card. What is the probability that you get either a King or a black card?
if you draw two cards from a standard deck of 52 cards without replacement find:a. P(King first, Jack second)b. P( face card first, ace second)c. P(2 aces
Two cards are selected from a standard deck of 52 playing cards. The first card is not replaced before the second card is selected. Find the probability of selecting a six and then selecting an eight. The probability of selecting a six and then selecting an eight is (Round to three decimal places as needed.)
Two cards are selected from a standard deck of 52 playing cards. The first card is not replaced before the second card is selected. Find the probability of selecting a two and then selecting a three. The probability of selecting a two and then selecting a three is (Round to three decimal places as needed.)
(1 point) Suppose that you randomly draw one card from a standard deck of 52 cards. After writing down which card was drawn, you replace the card, and draw another card. You repeat this process until you have drawn 15 cards in all. What is the probability of drawing at least 5 diamonds? For the experiment above, let X denote the number of diamonds that are drawn. For this random variable, find its expected value and standard deviation E(X)=( o=