I am having trouble understanding how you get $91/216$ as the answer to this question.
say a die is rolled three times
what is the probability that at least one roll is 6?
I am having trouble understanding how you get $91/216$ as the answer to this question.
say a die is rolled three times
what is the probability that at least one roll is 6?
On
Rolling a single die, the probability that it does not show a 6 is $5/6$. So rolling three dices, the probability for no 6 is $(5/6)^3$, and therefore the probability for at least one 6 is $$1-\left(\frac{5}{6}\right)^3 = \frac{91}{216}.$$
On
There are two answers already that express the probability as $$1-\left(\frac56\right)^3 = \frac{91}{216},$$
I'd like to point out that a more complicated, but more direct calculation gets to the same place. Let's let 6 represent a die that comes up a 6, and X a die that comes up with something else. Then we might distinguish eight cases for how the dice can come up:
666
66X
6X6
X66
6XX
X6X
XX6
XXX
We can easily calculate the probabilities for each of these eight cases. Each die has a $\frac16$ probability of showing a 6, and a $\frac56$ probability of showing something else, which we represented with X. To get the probability for a combination like 6X6 we multiply the three probabilities for the three dice; in this case $\frac16\cdot\frac56\cdot\frac16 = \frac5{216}$. This yields the following probabilities:
$$\begin{array}{|r|ll|} \hline \mathtt{666} & \frac16\cdot\frac16\cdot\frac16 & = \frac{1}{216} \\ \hline \mathtt{66X} & \frac16\cdot\frac16\cdot\frac56 & = \frac{5}{216} \\ \mathtt{6X6} & \frac16\cdot\frac56\cdot\frac16 & = \frac{5}{216} \\ \mathtt{X66} & \frac56\cdot\frac16\cdot\frac16 & = \frac{5}{216} \\ \hline \mathtt{6XX} & \frac16\cdot\frac56\cdot\frac56 & = \frac{25}{216} \\ \mathtt{X6X} & \frac56\cdot\frac16\cdot\frac56 & = \frac{25}{216} \\ \mathtt{XX6} & \frac56\cdot\frac56\cdot\frac16 & = \frac{25}{216} \\ \hline \mathtt{XXX} & \frac56\cdot\frac56\cdot\frac56 & = \frac{125}{216} \\ \hline \end{array} $$
The cases that we want are those that have at least one 6, which are the first seven lines of the table, and the sum of the probabilities for these lines is $$\frac{1}{216}+\frac{5}{216}+\frac{5}{216}+\frac{5}{216}+ \frac{25}{216}+\frac{25}{216}+\frac{25}{216} = \color{red}{\frac{91}{216}}$$ just as everyone else said.
Since the first 7 lines together with the 8th line account for all possible throws of the dice, together they add up to a probability of $\frac{216}{216} = 1$, and that leads to the easier way to get to the correct answer: instead of calculating and adding the first 7 lines, just calculate the 8th line, $\frac{125}{216}$ and subtract it from 1.
On
probability of getting at least a six on rolling = 1- probability of getting no sixes.
the probability of getting no sixes on one rolling is $\left(\frac{5}{6}\right) $
so, for 3 times rolling , we have that, the probability of getting no sixes is $\left(\frac{5}{6}\right)^3 = \frac{125}{216} $
so, the probability of getting at least one six is $1- \left(\frac{5}{6}\right)^3 = \frac{91}{216}$
i.e your answer.
I think this could be helpful for you
Compute:
$1 - \left(\dfrac{5}{6}\right)^3\; \;$ to obtain the probability that at least one 6 is rolled in three tosses.
That is, we find the probability that at least one $6$ is rolled by subtracting from $1$ the probability that it does not appear on any of three rolls:
The probability that $6$ does not appear given one roll is $5/6.\;$ The probability that a $6$ does not appear on three roles of the die is given by $$\left(\frac 56\right)^3 = \dfrac{125}{216}$$
P(Not rolling at least one 6 on three rolls) + P(rolling at least one 6 on three rolls)] =1
$\implies 1 - $ (probability of not rolling at least one 6) = (probability of rolling at least one 6).
So the probability of obtaining a $6$ on at least one roll is:
$$1 - \dfrac{125}{216} \quad = \quad \dfrac{216}{216} - \dfrac{125}{216} \quad = \quad\dfrac{91}{216}$$