With a fair die, you would expect it 60*(1/6) = 10 times.
If George rolls the die 300 times, how many fives will he roll?
90
the answer is the probability 6o =1/6 = 60%
the probability 6o =1/6 = 60%
The probability of rolling a four on a single roll of a fair die is 1/6. So the expected number of 4s in 450 rolls is 450*1/6 = 75.
69
If George rolls the die 300 times, how many fives will he roll?
50
You can expect to get a 5 about 15 times out of 90.
90
1/6 of 300 = 50 times.
the probability 6o =1/6 = 60%
the answer is the probability 6o =1/6 = 60%
pr(six) = 1/6 → expected 6s in 90 rolls = 1/6 × 90 = 15
You would expect it 0.3 of the times.
If you roll a die 100 times, you would expect to get a 1 about 17 times, because the probability of getting a 1 is 1 in 6, or 0.1667. However, that is theoretical probability; experimental probability - the actual results of doing this 100 times - might not be 17, but if you did this a large number of times, the experimental results would indeed begin to approach the theoretical results.
The answer depends on how many times a die is rolled and whether it is a fair die.For a single roll of a fair normal die, the answer is 2/3.The answer depends on how many times a die is rolled and whether it is a fair die.For a single roll of a fair normal die, the answer is 2/3.The answer depends on how many times a die is rolled and whether it is a fair die.For a single roll of a fair normal die, the answer is 2/3.The answer depends on how many times a die is rolled and whether it is a fair die.For a single roll of a fair normal die, the answer is 2/3.