For an experiment, the sample space includes all the possible outcomes.
The list of all possible outcomes for an event.
the collection of all the possible outcomes in a statistical experiment; may be discrete (consisting of categorised or counted values) or continuous (when a measurement is made on a scale that is continuous, e.g. mass, temperature, height).
a complete set of all events of an experiment
a set of all possible outcomes for an activity or experiment
a set of elements that represents all possible outcomes of a statistical experiment
a specification of all the outcomes that might result from an action taken, a decision made, or an experiment performed
The collection of all elementary events. Often identified with the sure event.
The set or collection of all possible outcomes of a probability experiment.
the set of all possible outcomes to a specified event.
all possible outcomes of an experiment
In probability, the set of all outcomes of a given experiment, e.g., the sample space for tossing two coins is (H,H), (H,T), (T,H), (T,T). (H)
A list of all possible outcomes in a given situation. Example:The sample space for tossing two coins is:(H,H), (H,T), (T,H), (T,T).
In probability theory, the sample space or universal sample space, often denoted S, Ω or U (for "universe"), of an experiment or random trial is the set of all possible outcomes. For example, if the experiment is tossing a coin, the sample space is the set {head, tail}. For tossing a single six-sided die, the sample space is {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}.