Probability is expressed as the ratio of desired outcomes to total outcomes.
For example, the probability of rolling 6 on a fair die is 1/6. There's 1 six out of 6 possible outcomes. 1/6 can also be converted to a decimal as 0.16666...
But there is no way to roll a 7 on a single die. So the probability of that is 0/6 or just 0.
Similarly there is no way to draw 10 kings from a standard deck of cards because each rank only appears 4 times.
Answer:
The probability of an impossible event is 0% or just 0.
P.S. The probability of an event that is definitely going to happen is 100%, or 1. That's why all probabilities are expressed as a percentage between 0% and 100% inclusive, or as a decimal between 0 and 1 inclusive.
Answers & Comments
Probability is expressed as the ratio of desired outcomes to total outcomes.
For example, the probability of rolling 6 on a fair die is 1/6. There's 1 six out of 6 possible outcomes. 1/6 can also be converted to a decimal as 0.16666...
But there is no way to roll a 7 on a single die. So the probability of that is 0/6 or just 0.
Similarly there is no way to draw 10 kings from a standard deck of cards because each rank only appears 4 times.
Answer:
The probability of an impossible event is 0% or just 0.
P.S. The probability of an event that is definitely going to happen is 100%, or 1. That's why all probabilities are expressed as a percentage between 0% and 100% inclusive, or as a decimal between 0 and 1 inclusive.
Are the cards being put back in the deck after each draw?
You have a 1 in 52 chance of drawing a king on any given pull.
Multiply that out ten times.
p = 7 x 10^-18 (roughly)
If not, then p = 0 since there are only 4 kings in a standard deck of cards.
Since there are only four kings in a deck it is impossible under any scenario.