What is the probability of 1, 6, 4, on 3 rolls of a die
Anywhere from 0 to 1; it depends on the shape and what numbers are written on the faces.
The probability of not rolling it ever is 0.For n rolls it is (5/6)n sofor 10 rolls it is 0.1615for 20 rolls it is 2.608*10-2for 100 rolls it is 1.207*10-8 and so on.
If you keep rolling the die, then the probability of rolling a 6 and then a 1 on consecutive rolls is 1.The probability is 1/36 for the first two throws.
The probability of 3 specific dice rolls is the probability that each one will happen multiplied together. For instance, the probability of rolling 2 then 6 then 4 is the probability of all of these multiplied together: The probability of rolling 2 is 1/6. The probability of rolling 6 is 1/6. The probability of rolling 4 is 1/6. Multiply these together and we get the total probability as 1/216
I'm assuming you multiply the numbers rolled. Thus the rules of even and odd numbers come into play. The only way to get an odd product is to roll two odd numbers. The probability desired is 1 minus the probability of rolling two odd numbers. The odds of rolling an odd number is 1/2. Since the rolls are independent events, the odds of rolling two odd numbers is (1/2)2 = 1/4 So the probability of getting an even product is: 1 - 1/4 = 3/4
What is the probability of 1, 6, 4, on 3 rolls of a die
The probability that the sum of the numbers rolled is either even or a multiple of 5 is 11/18.
Anywhere from 0 to 1; it depends on the shape and what numbers are written on the faces.
The probability of not rolling it ever is 0.For n rolls it is (5/6)n sofor 10 rolls it is 0.1615for 20 rolls it is 2.608*10-2for 100 rolls it is 1.207*10-8 and so on.
With a fair die, it is 1/216 in three rolls, but the probability increases to 1 (a certainty) as the number of rolls is increased.
If you keep rolling the die, then the probability of rolling a 6 and then a 1 on consecutive rolls is 1.The probability is 1/36 for the first two throws.
The probability of 3 specific dice rolls is the probability that each one will happen multiplied together. For instance, the probability of rolling 2 then 6 then 4 is the probability of all of these multiplied together: The probability of rolling 2 is 1/6. The probability of rolling 6 is 1/6. The probability of rolling 4 is 1/6. Multiply these together and we get the total probability as 1/216
Gary's chances of rolling either a 4 or a 6 are the same for any of the other numbers on the cube. The probability is 1 out of 3.
If the die is rolled often enough, the probability is 1. With only two rolls of a fair die, the probability is 1/6.
It is 0.2022
It is 0.0227