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Unit 14: Probability




          14.2 Sample Space                                                                     Notes

          Even though we cannot forecast the result of a random experiment with certainty we typically
          can state a set of potential outcomes. This provides the first element in our model for a random
          experiment.

          Definition

          The sample space Ù of a random experiment is defined as the set of all achievable results of the
          experiment.

                 Example: of random experiments along with their sample spaces are:
          1.   Cast two dice successively,
                = {(1, 1), (1, 2), . . . , (1, 6), (2, 1), . . . , (6, 6)}.
          2.   The lifetime of a machine (in days),
                = R+ = {positive real numbers} .
          3.   The number of coming calls at an exchange throughout a specific time interval,
                = {0, 1, · · · } = Z+ .
          4.   The heights of 10 chosen people.
                                                  10
                = {(x1, . . . , x10), xi e” 0, i = 1, . . . , 10} = R+  .
          Here (x1, . . . , x10) displays the result that the length of the first chosen person is x1, the length
          of the second person is x2, etc.



             Did u know?  For modeling purposes it is frequently simpler  to take the sample space
             larger than needed.


                 Example: The real lifetime of a machine would surely not extent the whole positive real
          axis. And the heights of the 10 chosen people would not surpass 3 metres.

          Self Assessment

          Fill in the blanks:
          4.   Even though we cannot forecast the result  of a  random experiment with certainty  we
               typically can state a set of potential ............................. .
          5.   The .............................   of a random experiment is  defined as the set of all achievable
               results of the experiment.
          6.   For modeling purposes it is frequently simpler to take the sample space .............................
               than needed.

          14.3 Events

          Frequently we are not concerned in a single result but in whether or not one of a group of results
          appears. Such subsets of the sample space are known as  events. Events will be signified  by
          capital letters A,B,C, . . . . We say that event A appears  if the result of the experiment is one of the
          essentials in A.




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