Determine which compound accidents are composed of independent minor accidents
The answer is: Draw a card from among 6 numbered cards (1-6) and throw a number cube.
The answer to this question is that when two experiments are performed together at the same time, with an incident connecting them, the resulting incident is a complex incident made up of simple, independent incidents. This means that each experience is a simple individual incident, and combining them into one collective incident results in a complex incident. Examples of this type of compound event include drawing a card from a deck of cards or rolling two dice in a game of chance. In each case, the outcome of a mass incident depends on the outcome of simple individual incidents.
The answer is: When two experiments are performed together at the same time, with an event connecting them, the resulting complex event is made up of independent simple events. For example, if an experiment is conducted to draw a card from among 6 cards numbered 1 through 6, the complex event is made up of 6 individual simple events – each card drawn is an independent simple event. The same is true of any experience that involves multiple components interacting with each other – the resulting complex event is made up of simple, independent incidents.