If two six sided fair dice are rolled, the sum of the result of both dice that has the lowest probability to come up is 2 and 12. P(2) = 1/36. P(12) = 1/36.
12
2
The probability is 1, if the dice are rolled often enough.
Zero. The minimum value of two dice being rolled is two.
If two six sided fair dice are rolled, the sum of the result of both dice that has the lowest probability to come up is 2 and 12. P(2) = 1/36. P(12) = 1/36.
12
2
The are 36 permutations of two dice. Of these, 6 permutations have the two dice with the same number, specifically 1+1, 2+2, 3+3, 4+4, 5+5, and 6+6. The probability, then, that two dice rolled will not have the same number is 30 in 36, or 5 in 6, or about 0.8333.
1/6
if you multiply the number of rolls you did you will get the answer
The probability is 1, if the dice are rolled often enough.
The most common number would be 10 and 11. When using 3 dice, the total sum of eyes must be between 3 and 18. The most probably number being rolled can be found simply by calculating the average of the highest and lowest possibilities. (3+18)/2 = 10,5 ; meaning 10 and 11 are the two most probable numbers to be rolled using 3 dice.
1+1 lowest, 6+6 highest so 12 - 2 = 10
Sum of two dice eqauls 8: 2,6 3,5 4,4 5,3 6,2 = 5 in 36
If they are normal dice, the probability is 0.
36, if they are standard dice.