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A fair six-sided number cube is rolled 60 times. What is the probability that fewer than 10% of the rolls are a five?

Find the z-table here.

2 Answers

6 votes

Answer: 0.082

Explanation:

User BobK
by
8.6k points
6 votes

Answer:

0.0823 = 8.23% probability that fewer than 10% of the rolls are a five

Explanation:

To solve this question, we need to understand the normal probability distribution and the central limit theorem.

Normal probability distribution

When the distribution is normal, we use the z-score formula.

In a set with mean
\mu and standard deviation
\sigma, the zscore of a measure X is given by:


Z = (X - \mu)/(\sigma)

The Z-score measures how many standard deviations the measure is from the mean. After finding the Z-score, we look at the z-score table and find the p-value associated with this z-score. This p-value is the probability that the value of the measure is smaller than X, that is, the percentile of X. Subtracting 1 by the pvalue, we get the probability that the value of the measure is greater than X.

Central Limit Theorem

For a proportion p in a sample of size n, the sampling distribution of the sample proportion will be approximately normal with mean
\mu = p and standard deviation
s = \sqrt{(p(1-p))/(n)}.

A fair six-sided number cube is rolled 60 times.

This means that
n = 60

Rolls that are a five:

For each roll, there are 6 possible outcomes: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6. So the probability of rolling a five is:


p = (1)/(6) = 0.1667

The distribution has mean and standard deviation:


\mu = p = 0.1667


s = \sqrt{(p(1-p))/(n)} = \sqrt{(0.1667*(1-0.1667))/(60)} = 0.0481

What is the probability that fewer than 10% of the rolls are a five?

This is the pvalue of Z when X = 0.1. So


Z = (X - \mu)/(\sigma)

By the Central Limit Theorem


Z = (X - \mu)/(s)


Z = (0.1 - 0.1667)/(0.0471)


Z = -1.39


Z = -1.39 has a pvalue of 0.0823

0.0823 = 8.23% probability that fewer than 10% of the rolls are a five

User Niiru
by
7.9k points

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