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This question assumes that a year has 365 days, and each day of the year is equally likely to be a birthday for someone.

At first I thought I simply had to select a day and then 2 individuals ($\frac{\binom{10}{2}}{365}$, but then this can't make sense because I am seeking how many days, not people.

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    +1. This is a nice take on the old "birthday paradox", as it's sometimes called.2012-10-04

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The probability a given day has no birthdays is $\left(1-\frac{1}{365}\right)^{10}$ so the expected number of days with no birthday is $365$ times this, about $355.1224$.

The probability a given day has exactly one birthday is $10 \times \frac{1}{365} \times \left(1-\frac{1}{365}\right)^9$ so the expected number of days with exactly one birthday is $365$ times this, about $9.7561$.

Subtract these two figures from $365$ and you get a result of about $0.1215$ for the expected number of days with two or more birthdays.

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    @David: They are not independent, but that does not matter when taking the expectation of a sum2012-10-04