There are 6 sides on a die, so the denominator should be 6. The number 3 appears on the dice once, so the fraction probability should be 1/6.
The probability of rolling a 7 at any time on a single die is zero.
1 in 6, or about 0.167
1
There are 36 permutations of two dice. Of these, six have a sum of seven. The probability, then, of rolling a seven on two dice is 6 in 36, or 1 in 6, or about 0.1667.It does not matter if two dice are rolled one time, or if one die is rolled two times. The probability of rolling a sum of 7 is still about 0.1667.The first thing to do is to identify all possible combinations which could give the sum of 7. These are: 6 and 1, 5 and 2, 4 and 3, 3 and 4, 2 and 5, and 1 and 6.Thus there are 6 possible combinations.For each of these combinations, the probability of getting the 1st number correct is 1/6 and the probability of getting the second number correct is 1/6, and so the overall probability of the combination is 1/36There are 6 ways to get 7 though so 6x 1/36 = 1/6Which means the probability that 2 dice rolls will add up to 7 is 1/6
The probability is 1/6.
What is the probability of rolling a 6 the first time and a 1 the second time
The probability of rolling a 7 at any time on a single die is zero.
1/6
The probability of rolling a 3 on a single die is 1/6. Similarly, the probability of rolling a 5 on a single die is also 1/6. When rolling the die twice, the probabilities are independent events, so you multiply the probabilities together: (1/6) * (1/6) = 1/36. Therefore, the probability of rolling a 3 the first time and a 5 the second time is 1/36.
1 in 6, or about 0.167
Not Sure
10/3
The probability of rolling 6 dice and getting 1 2 3 4 5 and 6 all in a row is one in 720, because you are talking about the permutations of six things taken six at a time, which is 6 factorial.
There are two possibilities for rolling three once, so the probability of this even is 2/36 or 1/18. Since each roll is an independent event, the total probability is: P(rolling three three times) = (1/18)3 = 1/5832
The probability of getting a head first time is one out of two, or a half. The probability of getting a head the next time is still one out of two, so the combined probability is one quarter. Similarly, one eighth is the probability of getting three in a row; but the pattern does not end there, the probability of getting a tails the next time is STILL one in two, so that is a one in sixteen chance of that run, the probability of the entire sequence is therefore one in thirty-two.
The experimental probability of anything cannot be answered without doing it, because that is what experimental probability is - the probability that results from conducting an experiment, a posteri. This is different than theoretical probability, which can be computed a priori. For instance, the theoretical probability of rolling a 3 is 1 in 6, or about 0.1667, but the experimental probability changes every time you run the experiment
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