danybelt
danybelt danybelt
  • 11-03-2019
  • Mathematics
contestada

When two events are mutually exclusive, why is P(A and B)=0?

Respuesta :

altavistard
altavistard altavistard
  • 11-03-2019

Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

"mutually exclusive" means "cannot happen at the same time."  There's no "union" (no A ∩ B).  The probability of this "union" is zero.

Answer Link

Otras preguntas

The volume of a cube is 729 cubic inches. What is the area of each face of the cube
44.3 in scientific notation
What is 7/200 as a decimal
Amy has saved $725 for a new guitar and lesson. Her guitar cost $475, and guitar lessons are $25 per hour. Determine how many hours of lessons she can afford
Give an example of thailand's abundance of animal life.
Which of the following ideas did Karl Marx believe?
How can a story told in chronological order build suspence?
double layer surrounding the nucleus
how feudalism brought about social and political order during the Middle Ages.
What is the value of n (3xn)+4=32