i hate this place
Rolling a single die: Six values are possible. Only five is divisible by five; both three and six and divisible by three; making three possibilities. Therefore, the required probability is 3/6 = 0.5.
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.
One in 6.
1/6
i hate this place
Rolling a single die: Six values are possible. Only five is divisible by five; both three and six and divisible by three; making three possibilities. Therefore, the required probability is 3/6 = 0.5.
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
assuming a single six sided die the probability of rolling a three is 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 a five on a standard die is 1 in 6, or about 0.1667.
The probability of rolling a six with a standard die five times in a row is (1 in 6)5 which equals 1 in 7776 or about 0.0001286.
One in 6.
1/6
Since there are 6 sides to the die, the probability of rolling a 5 on one roll is 1/6. Since each roll is an independent event the probability of the multiple results is the product of the probability of each result. So 2 consecutive 5's would occur with a probability of (1/6)(1/6) = 1/36
The probability is 1/6 x 5=5/12
Assuming it is a regular 6 sided die, it would be 4/6 or 2/3.