Ask Question
15 February, 17:01

Two six-sided fair dice are rolled simultaneously. The probability that the sum of the two numbers rolled is greater than 3, given that the sum of the numbers is not greater than 5, is. The probability that one of the numbers is a 6 and the sum of the two numbers is an odd number is.

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 15 February, 17:22
    0
    Two 6-sided fair dice can land in 36 ways.

    A). How many ways can they land where the sum of the two numbers rolled is greater than 3, given that the sum of the numbers is not greater than 5?

    Well, that's just a complicated way of saying that they show either 4 or 5.

    There are 7 ways that can happen:

    1 ... 3

    3 ... 1

    1 ... 4

    4 ... 1

    2 ... 2

    2 ... 3

    3 ... 2

    So the probability is 7/36 = about 19.4%.

    B). How many ways can they land where one of the numbers is a 6 and the sum of the two numbers is an odd number?

    There are 6 ways that can happen:

    6 ... 1

    1 ... 6

    6 ... 3

    3 ... 6

    6 ... 5

    5 ... 6

    So the probability is 6/36 = 1/6 = 16-2/3 %.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “Two six-sided fair dice are rolled simultaneously. The probability that the sum of the two numbers rolled is greater than 3, given that the ...” in 📗 Mathematics if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers