Math, asked by achhi8070, 1 year ago

Two events are said to be independent if
(a) each out come has equal chance of occurrence
(b) there is the common point in between them
(c) one does not affect the occurrence of the other.
(d) both events have only one point

Answers

Answered by rishavsharma41p9yexp
0
option cis correct i.e one deos not affect occurence of other
Answered by mysticd
0
Hi ,

Independent Events:

Two events A and B of an experiment

are said to be Independent if

occurrence of A cannot influence

the happening of the event B .

Option ( c ) is correct.

I hope this helps you.

: )
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