Math, asked by jivanshantiamc1057, 1 month ago

For a random variable X that follows the binomial probability distribution, the lower limit of X is zero. True or False?

Answers

Answered by kavitagupta2484
0

May be

Step-by-step explanation:

false

hope it helps

Answered by SmritiSami
0

It is true that for a random variable X that follows the binomial probability distribution, the lower limit of X is zero.

  • Binomial distributions must additionally meet the following three requirements:
  1. A certain number of observations or trials are required. To put it another way, you can only know the probability of something happening if you do it a certain number of times. This is self-evident: you have a 50% probability of getting tails if you toss a coin once. You have a decent probability of getting tails if you toss a coin 20 times.
  2. Each observation or trial differs from the previous ones. In other words, none of your experiments have any bearing on the outcome of the next experiment.
  3. From trial to trial, the chances of success (tails, heads, fail, or success) are the same.
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