When rolling a standard six-sided die (dot cube), the probability of any specific outcome, including landing with exactly two dots on top, is determined by the number of favorable outcomes divided by the total number of possible outcomes. There is one face with two dots, and there are six possible faces in total. Therefore, the probability of rolling a die and having it stop with exactly two dots on top is 1/6.
Prob = 4/36 = 1/9
There are 6 numbers on a standard number cube
A die has dots to represent numbers and a number cube has actual numbers. Or, depending on what kind of number cube it is, it might just be the same thing.
1in 6 chance
There are four sides of the six sided die which have an odd or less than four number of dots: 1, 2, 3, 5 The chance that one of these is rolled is 4/6 or 2/3 or 0.666...
One out of six. Note that this question is easier to think of if you use a more familiar name for the object, e.g. a "rolled die", not a "rolled dot cube". Many textbook publishers use the phrases "dot cube" or "number cube" to avoid associating the material with gaming, though the question becomes more intuitive when written "what is the probability that you will roll a 2 on a normal 6-sided die?"
Prob = 4/36 = 1/9
There are exactly 21 dots on a die.
21 dots on 1 dice 21 dots
dice
dice
rubix
A GameCube with dots on it is a GameCube with dots on it...
Snake
There are exactly 21 dots on a die.
die
The area with the highest probability of finding an electron is often represented by an electron cloud model, where the density of dots indicates probability. In quantum mechanics, this is typically visualized using probability density functions, but the exact number of dots can vary depending on the specific orbital and the visualization method used. Therefore, there isn't a fixed number of dots; rather, it reflects the likelihood of finding an electron in a given region of space.