NCERT Mathematics Class 10 - Chapter 14: Probability - Notes

प्रायिकता

Learning Objectives

  • Understand the theoretical (classical) approach to probability
  • Find the probability of an event
  • Understand complementary events and their probabilities
  • Solve problems involving coins, dice, cards, and real-life situations

Key Concepts

Basic Definitions

An experiment is a trial that produces a well-defined outcome. A random experiment is one where the outcome cannot be predicted with certainty.

The sample space is the set of all possible outcomes of a random experiment.

An event is a subset of the sample space. An event occurs if the actual outcome belongs to it.

Theoretical Probability

P(E) = Number of outcomes favourable to E / Total number of outcomes

This assumes all outcomes are equally likely.

Important Properties

  • 0 ≤ P(E) ≤ 1 for any event E
  • P(sure event) = 1 (the event that always occurs)
  • P(impossible event) = 0 (the event that never occurs)
  • P(E) + P(E') = 1, where E' (or E-bar) is the complement of E
  • The sum of probabilities of all elementary events = 1

Common Experiments

Tossing a coin: Sample space = {H, T}; P(H) = P(T) = 1/2.

Throwing a die: Sample space = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}; each P = 1/6.

Deck of 52 cards: 4 suits (hearts, diamonds, clubs, spades), each with 13 cards (A, 2-10, J, Q, K). 26 red cards, 26 black cards, 12 face cards (J, Q, K of each suit).

Complementary Events

If P(getting an even number on a die) = 3/6 = 1/2, then P(not getting an even number) = 1 - 1/2 = 1/2.

This is useful when it is easier to calculate the probability of the complementary event.

Summary

Probability measures how likely an event is to occur. The classical definition assumes equally likely outcomes. The probability of any event ranges from 0 to 1. Complementary events are key to simplifying many calculations. Understanding sample spaces for standard experiments (coins, dice, cards) is essential for board exams.

Important Terms

Random Experiment
An experiment whose outcome is uncertain
Sample Space
The set of all possible outcomes of a random experiment
Event
A subset of the sample space; a collection of outcomes
Complementary Event
The event that E does not occur, denoted E'; P(E') = 1 - P(E)
Equally Likely Outcomes
Outcomes that have the same probability of occurring

Quick Revision

  1. P(E) = Favourable outcomes / Total outcomes
  2. 0 ≤ P(E) ≤ 1; P(sure event) = 1; P(impossible event) = 0
  3. P(E) + P(not E) = 1
  4. A standard die has 6 outcomes; a coin has 2 outcomes
  5. A deck has 52 cards: 4 suits of 13 each; 12 face cards; 4 aces
NCERT Mathematics Class 10 - Chapter 14: Probability - Notes | EduMunch