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How Do You Work Out The Odds Of Two People In A Group Sharing The Same Birthday?
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This is prompted by the remarkable number of ABers sharing a birthday today.
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http:// en.wiki pedia.o rg/wiki /Birthd ay_prob lem#Cal culatin g_the_p robabil ity
Probably the most important part of that page though is this graph, which illustrates the increasing probability of 2 people sharing a birthday as the group size gets larger:
http:// upload. wikimed ia.org/ wikiped ia/comm ons/thu mb/e/e7 /Birthd ay_Para dox.svg /300px- Birthda y_Parad ox.svg. png
It shows that you only need 23 people in a group for there to be a 50% chance of a shared birthday. Since there are usually just a few more than 23 people in each secondary school class, you'd expect roughly half the classes in a school to have a pair of pupils sharing the same birthday.
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Probably the most important part of that page though is this graph, which illustrates the increasing probability of 2 people sharing a birthday as the group size gets larger:
http://
It shows that you only need 23 people in a group for there to be a 50% chance of a shared birthday. Since there are usually just a few more than 23 people in each secondary school class, you'd expect roughly half the classes in a school to have a pair of pupils sharing the same birthday.
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