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For example, the probability of flipping a coin and it being heads is ½, because t
here is 1 way of getting a head and the total number of possible outcomes is 2 (
a head or tail).
We write P(heads) = ½ .
The probability of something which is certain to happen is 1.
The probability of something which is impossible to happen is 0.
The probability of something not happening is 1 minus the probability that it wi
ll happen.
Single Events
Example
There are 6 beads in a bag, 3 are red, 2 are yellow and 1 is blue.
What is the probability of picking a yellow?
The probability is the number of yellows in the bag divided by the total number
of balls, i.e. 2/6 1/3.
Example
There is a bag full of coloured balls, red, blue, green and orange.
Balls are picked out and replaced. John did this 1000 times and obtained the fol
lowing results:
Number of blue balls picked out: 300
Number of red balls: 200
Number of green balls: 450
Number of orange balls: 50
a) What is the probability of picking a green ball?
b) If there are 100 balls in the bag, how many of them are likely to be green?
a) For every 1000 balls picked out, 450 are green. Therefore P(green) 450/1000 0
.45
b) The experiment suggests that 450 out of 1000 balls are green. Therefore, out
of 100 balls, 45 are green (using ratios).
Multiple Events
When working out what the probability of two things happening is, a probability/
possibility space can be drawn.
For example, if you throw two dice, what is the probability that you will get: a
) 8, b) 9, c) either 8 or 9?
a) The black blobs indicate the ways of getting 8 (a 2 and a 6, a 3 and a 5, ...
). There are 5 different ways.
The probability space shows us that when throwing 2 dice, there are 36 different
possibilities (36 squares). With 5 of these possibilities, you will get 8.
Therefore P(8) 5/36 .
b) The red blobs indicate the ways of getting 9. There are four ways, therefore
P(9) 4/36 1/9.
c) You will get an 8 or 9 in any of the 'blobbed' squares. There are 9 altogethe
r, so P(8 or 9) 9/36 1/4 .
Another way of representing 2 or more events is on a probability tree.
Example
There are 3 balls in a bag: red, yellow and blue. One ball is picked out, and no
t replaced, and then another ball is picked out.
(diagram needed)
Example
What is the probability of getting a yellow and a red in any order?
This is the same as: what is the probability of getting a yellow AND a red OR a
red AND a yellow.
P(yellow and red) 1/3 × 1/2 1/6
P(red and yellow) 1/3 × 1/2 1/6
P(yellow and red or red and yellow) 1/6 + 1/6 1/3
Pythagoras's Theorem
In any right-angled triangle, the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum o
f the squares of the other two sides.
i.e.: c^2 = a^2 + b^2 in the following diagram:
Example
Find AC in the diagram below.
AB^2 + AC^2 = BC^2
AC^2 = BC^2 - AB^2
= 13^2 - 5^2
= 169 - 25 = 144
AC = 12\mathsf{cm}.
(diagram missing)
Pythagorean Triangles
There are two common triangles that you must know.