3 out of 18
When rolling a single die, the probability of rolling a five is ( \frac{1}{6} ). To find the probability of rolling a five three times in a row, you multiply the individual probabilities together: ( \left(\frac{1}{6}\right)^3 = \frac{1}{216} ). Therefore, the probability of rolling a five on one die three times in a row is ( \frac{1}{216} ) or approximately 0.00463.
The probability of rolling a 3 on a six-sided die in a single roll is 1/6. When rolling the die three times, the probability of getting at least one 3 can be calculated using the complement: first, find the probability of not rolling a 3 in three rolls, which is (5/6)³. Subtract this value from 1 to find the probability of rolling at least one 3 in three attempts.
With one standard die, the probability is one in six.
one in 6 times one in 6 = one in 36
Since there are 6 sides and only one 4, the probability of rolling a 4 is one in 6 or 1/6.
The probability of rolling at least one 2 when rolling a die 12 times is about 0.8878. Simply raise the probability of not rolling a 2 (5 in 6, or about 0.8333) to the 12th power, getting about 0.1122, and subtract from 1.
The probability of rolling a six on a die 6 times in a row is 1 in 46,656, or 0.000021433. The calculate that, the probability of rolling one 6 is 1 in 6. Simply raise that to the sixth power to get 1 in 46,656.
The probability is 1/6.
The probability of rolling a 3 on a six-sided die in a single roll is 1/6. When rolling the die three times, the probability of getting at least one 3 can be calculated using the complement: first, find the probability of not rolling a 3 in three rolls, which is (5/6)³. Subtract this value from 1 to find the probability of rolling at least one 3 in three attempts.
With one standard die, the probability is one in six.
one in 6 times one in 6 = one in 36
The theoretical probability of rolling a 5 on a standard six sided die is one in six. It does not matter how many times you roll it, however, if you roll it 300 times, the theoretical probability is that you would roll a 5 fifty times.
The chance is one in 216 (6^-3).The probability of rolling a five once is 1/6. Rolling a five again, on the same die or another, will still have a 1/6 chance. Therefore, the probability of the event occurring twice is 1/36 (1/6^2). Three times has a probability of 1/216 (1/6^3), and so on. It does not matter what die is used, as long as it has six sides.The probability p of rolling a number x times consecutively on an s sided die isp=s^-x
Since there is only one even prime, 2, the probability of rolling a 2 with one die is 1 in 6.
Since there are 6 sides and only one 4, the probability of rolling a 4 is one in 6 or 1/6.
The probability of rolling a multiple of five on a standard die is 1 in 6, or about 0.1667.The probability of rolling a 10, 15, or higher is zero, because the question implied only one die.
The probability of rolling the same number six times on a standard die is (1 in 6)5 or 1 in 7776, or about 0.0001286. The reason the exponent above is five instead of six is that the probability of rolling "some" number on one die is 1, so you need to look at the probability of the other five dice matching the first die. It would not matter if you rolled one die six times, or six dice one time. The odds are the same.