This book is intended as a practical guide for advanced undergraduates
to the use of probability and statistics in experimental physics. The
emphasis is on applications and understanding, on techniques that are
used in experimental physics, and on the use of computers. This second
edition includes a new chapter on queuing problems (such as, how large a
buffer does one need deal with a random stream of data), and it
introduces a new method for dealing with experiments in which only a few
events are observed.