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16 March, 12:57

What will caused the probability of the experiment does not match to the theoretical probabilities? And what's 0 to the 0th power?

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Answers (2)
  1. 16 March, 13:09
    0
    see below

    Step-by-step explanation:

    A theoretical probability the what we think will happen like flipping a coin 10 times and getting 5 heads. We more than likely will not get 5 heads if we flip a coin 10 times. The experimental probability gets closer to the theoretical probability the more times we run the experiment. If we flip a coin a 100 times it will probably be closer to 50 heads than it was at 10 times. If we flip a coin a 1000 times, it would get even closer.

    0^0 is undefined. It is like me asking you to tear a piece of paper into 0 pieces. You cannot do it. Group 0 pieces of paper into 0 groups. It logically doesn't make sense.
  2. 16 March, 13:17
    0
    Experimental probability is what happens; it's obtained based on outcomes of an experiment with a certain number of trials.

    Theoretical probability is what is expected to happen. It is based on an estimate of predicted outcomes of an experimental.

    0⁰ is an indeterminate form.

    Any number to the power 0 is 1 except for zero
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