Question

A pair of fair dice is thrown independently three times. The probability of getting a score of exactly 9 twice is

A. $$\frac{8}{{729}}$$
B. $$\frac{8}{{243}}$$  
C. $$\frac{1}{{729}}$$
D. $$\frac{8}{{9}}$$
Answer :   $$\frac{8}{{243}}$$
Solution :
A pair of fair dice is thrown, the sample space $$S$$ = (1, 1) (1,2) (1, 3) . . . . = 36
Possibility of getting 9 are (5,4) , (4, 5), (6,3), (3,6)
∴ Probability of getting score 9 in a single throw
$$\eqalign{ & = \frac{4}{{36}} \cr & = \frac{1}{9} \cr} $$
∴ Probability of getting score 9 exactly twice
$$\eqalign{ & = {\,^3}{C_2} \times {\left( {\frac{1}{9}} \right)^2}.\left( {1 - \frac{1}{9}} \right) \cr & = \frac{{3!}}{{2!}} \times \frac{1}{9} \times \frac{1}{9} \times \frac{8}{9} \cr & = \frac{{3.2!}}{{2!}} \times \frac{1}{9} \times \frac{1}{9} \times \frac{8}{9} \cr & = \frac{8}{{243}} \cr} $$

Releted MCQ Question on
Statistics and Probability >> Probability

Releted Question 1

Two fair dice are tossed. Let $$x$$ be the event that the first die shows an even number and $$y$$ be the event that the second die shows an odd number. The two events $$x$$ and $$y$$ are:

A. Mutually exclusive
B. Independent and mutually exclusive
C. Dependent
D. None of these
Releted Question 2

Two events $$A$$ and $$B$$ have probabilities 0.25 and 0.50 respectively. The probability that both $$A$$ and $$B$$ occur simultaneously is 0.14. Then the probability that neither $$A$$ nor $$B$$ occurs is

A. 0.39
B. 0.25
C. 0.11
D. none of these
Releted Question 3

The probability that an event $$A$$ happens in one trial of an experiment is 0.4. Three independent trials of the experiment are performed. The probability that the event $$A$$ happens at least once is

A. 0.936
B. 0.784
C. 0.904
D. none of these
Releted Question 4

If $$A$$ and $$B$$ are two events such that $$P(A) > 0,$$   and $$P\left( B \right) \ne 1,$$   then $$P\left( {\frac{{\overline A }}{{\overline B }}} \right)$$  is equal to
(Here $$\overline A$$ and $$\overline B$$ are complements of $$A$$ and $$B$$ respectively).

A. $$1 - P\left( {\frac{A}{B}} \right)$$
B. $$1 - P\left( {\frac{{\overline A }}{B}} \right)$$
C. $$\frac{{1 - P\left( {A \cup B} \right)}}{{P\left( {\overline B } \right)}}$$
D. $$\frac{{P\left( {\overline A } \right)}}{{P\left( {\overline B } \right)}}$$

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