I roll two dice, as we've discussed to death in class. Are the
events "You rolled doubles" and "You rolled an eight" mutually
exclusive?
Yes
No
Not enough info
I roll two dice, as we've discussed to death in class. Are the events "You rolled...
You roll two six-sided fair dice. a. Let A be the event that either a 4 or 5 is rolled first followed by an even number. P(A) = Round your answer to four decimal places. b. Let B be the event that the sum of the two dice is at most 5. P(B) = Round your answer to four decimal places. c. Are A and B mutually exclusive events? d. Are A and B independent events?
1.) Suppose you roll two fair six-sided dice. What is the probabilty that I rolled a total of 5? 2.) Suppose you roll two fair six-sided die and I announce that the sun of the two die is 6 or less. What is the probabilty that you rolled a total of 5?
You roll eight six-sided dice. What is the chance that you rolled exactly two fives? (0) 0 6 6
You roll eight six-sided dice. What is the chance that you rolled exactly two fives? (0) 0 6 6
A) Suppose I roll two fair six-sided dice. What is the probability that I rolled a total of 5? B) Suppose I roll two fair six-sided die and I announce that the sum of the two die is 6 or less. What is the probability that I rolled a total of 5?
2) Two fair dice are rolled. Find the following probabilities: (10pts) a) P(the sum of the dice is not eight) b) P(doubles are rolled) c) P(doubles are rolled given that the sum of the dice is eight)
8. We roll two fair dice. (1) Given that the roll results in a sum of 6 or less, what is the conditional probability that doubles are rolled? A "double" means that two dice have the same number (2) Given that the two dice land on different numbers, what is the conditional proba- bility that at least one die roll is a 1?
if you have two fair dice that are rolled, what is the probability of a sum 6 given that the roll is a 'double'?
Explain when will two events be independent and when will two events be mutually exclusive. Can two mutually exclusive events be independent also? Can two independent events be mutually exclusive? Suppose the experiment is roll two dice. Consider events E= both numbers are even. F = both numbers are odd, Are E and F mutually exclusive? Are they independent? Consider events U and V. U= the first number is even, V= the second number is even. Are U and V mutually...
Two six-sided dice are rolled. Determine the probability of the following events: a) The second dice shows the number two. b) The sum of dice is nine or more. c) None of the dice show a one. I would like a full solution for all of these three questions, if possible please.