DSG Sir
DSG Sir
Date of Submission:2080-11-18
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Declaration
I hereby declare that the report of the project work PROBABILTY presented in
this project was done by myself and not submitted elsewhere for examination.
All sources of information have been specially acknowledged by references to
authors or institutions
Signature
Name of the student: Abhay Pant
Stream: Science
Class: 12
Section: M12
Date: 2080-11-18
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Recommendations
…...........................
Signature
Dr. Santosh Ghimire
Date: 2080-11-18
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Endorsement
….................. …...................
Signature Signature
Name of HOD: Mr. Chiranjibi Gyawali Dr. Nagendra Aryal
Department of Mathematics Principal
Date: Date:
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Acknowledgement
I would like to thank my teacher Dr. Santosh Ghimire who gave me this
opportunity to work on this project. I got to learn a lot from this project about sets.
I would also like to thank our college principal Dr. Nagendra Aryal.
Abhay Pant
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Contents
o Declaration
o Acknowledgement
o Recommendation
o Endorsement
o Acknowledgement
o Probability
Experiment
Random Exp.
o Some details about these exp.
Looking at all possible outcomes in various exp.
o Probability of –
Occurrence of event
Examples Ex. 1, 2, 3 and 4
o Conclusion
o Bibliography
o End
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INTRODUCTION
Thus, in various experiments, we would get different probabilities for the same
event
However, theoretical probability overcomes the above problem. In this project by
probability, we shall mean theoretical probability
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PROBABILITY
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SOME DETAILS ABOUT THESE
EXPERIEMENTS
Tossing a coin – When we throw a coin, either a head (H) or a tail (T)
appears on the upper face.
Drawing a card from a well-shuffled deck of 52 cards.
A deck of playing cards has in all 52 cards.
(i) It has 13 cards each of four suits, namely
spades, clubs, hearts and diamonds.
(a) Cards of spades and clubs are black cards.
(b) Cards of hearts and diamonds are red cards.
Spades Clubs Hearts Diamonds
(ii) Kings, queens and jacks (or knaves) are known as face
cards. Thus, there are in all 12 face cards.
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LOOKING AT ALL POSSIBLE
OUTCOMES IN VARIOUS
EXPERIMENTS
When we toss a coin, we get either a head (H) or a tail (T). Thus, all
possible outcomes are H, T :
Suppose two coins are tossed simultaneously. Then, all possible
outcomes are HH, HT, TH, TT
(HH means head on first coin and head on second coin. HT means head
on first coin and tail on second coin etc.)
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EQUALLY LIKELY EVENTS A given number of events are said to be
equally likely if none of them is expected to occur in preference to the
others.
For example, if we roll an unbiased die, each number is equally likely to
occur. If, however, a die is so formed that a particular face occurs most
often then the die is biased. In this case, the outcomes are not equally
likely to happen.
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PROBABILITY OF OCCURRENCE OF AN
EVENT
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IMPOSSIBLE EVENT - In a single toss of a die, what is the
probability of getting a number 8?
We know that in tossing a die, 8 will never come up.
So, getting 8 is an impossible event.
P (getting 8 in a single throw of a die) = 0/6 = 0.
Thus, the probability of an impossible event is zero.
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SOLVED EXAMPLES
14
When we make a pattern by going up and then along, then add up the
values
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EXAMPLE-3 : A bag contains 5 red balls and some blue balls. If the
probability of drawing a blue ball from the bag is thrice that of a red
ball, find the number of blue balls in the bag.
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Application Of PROBABILTY in Daily Life
Genetics:
Finance:
1
In finance and investment, PROBABILTY can be applied to calculate the
combinations and probabilities associated with different investment scenarios.
Combinatorial Problems:
In practical situations, this can be useful in scenarios like optimizing routes for
delivery services or organizing events with different seating arrangements.
2
Architects and artists may find inspiration in the visual symmetry and patterns
derived from PROBABILTY when designing structures or creating aesthetically
pleasing visual compositions.
3
Conclusion For Maths Project on PROBABILTY
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BIBLOGRAPHY
Foundation of Mathematics
Durga Jung K.C
Dr. Santosh Ghimire
Jhavi Lal Ghimire
Ananta Upreti
Amrit Sharma Gautam
Basic Mathematics
Dr. Ratna Bajracharya
Ram Man Shrestha
Mohan Bir Singh
Yog Ratna Sthapit
Bhanu Chandra Bajracharya
http://mathforum.org/dr.math/faq/faq.pascal.triangle.html
https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/pascal-triangle/
https://medium.com/i-math/top-10-secrets-of-pascals-triangle-6012ba9c5e23
https://www.mathsisfun.com/pascals-triangle.html