An experiment is rolling two fair dice. a) What is the probability that the sum is 8 ? Round answer to 3 decimal places. \( \square \) b) What is the probability that the sum is 8 given that the first die is a 3 ? Round answer to 3 decimal places. \( \square \) c) What is the probability that the first die is a 3 given that the sum is 8 ? Round answer to 3 decimal places. \( \square \) d) Are the events the sum is 8 and the first die is a 3 independent events? Why or why not? Round answer to 3 decimal places. Select an answer e) What is the probability that the sum is 7 ? Round answer to 3 decimal places. \( \square \) f) What is the probability that the sum is 7 given that the first die is a 2? Round answer to 3 decimal places. \( \square \) g) What is the probability that the first die is a 2 given that the sum is \( 7 ?^{\circ} \) Round answer to 3 decimal places. \( \square \) h) Are the events the sum is 7 and the first die is a 2 independent events?
Upstudy AI Solution
Answer
Solution
Answered by UpStudy AI and reviewed by a Professional Tutor


Bonus Knowledge
To find the probability that the sum of two dice is 8, we first list all possible pairs of dice that yield this sum: (2,6), (3,5), (4,4), (5,3), and (6,2). That's 5 successful outcomes out of 36 possible combinations (since each die has 6 sides). Thus, the probability is \( \frac{5}{36} \approx 0.139 \), rounded to three decimal places. For part b, if the first die is a 3, the possible sums that give us 8 can only come from the second die being a 5. So, there is only 1 successful outcome (3,5) out of 6 total possibilities (since the second die can still be any number from 1 to 6). The probability here is \( \frac{1}{6} \approx 0.167 \), rounded to three decimal places. For part c, if we look at the sum being 8, the successful outcomes are the same as before. However, only one of those outcomes (3,5) has the first die as a 3. The total successful outcomes for the sum being 8 is still 5. Therefore, the conditional probability is calculated as \( \frac{1}{5} \approx 0.200 \), rounded to three decimal places. In part d, we check independence. Events are independent if the occurrence of one does not affect the occurrence of another. Here, knowing the first die is 3 does influence the overall sum needing to be 8 (there’s only one successful outcome). Hence, they are not independent. Moving to part e, for the sum to equal 7, the successful pairs are (1,6), (2,5), (3,4), (4,3), (5,2), and (6,1)—that's 6 outcomes. Therefore, the probability is \( \frac{6}{36} = \frac{1}{6} \approx 0.167 \), rounded to three decimal places. For part f, if the first die is a 2, then the only scenario leading to a sum of 7 is the second die being a 5, making that just a single successful outcome. Therefore, the probability is \( \frac{1}{6} \approx 0.167 \), rounded to three decimal places. Next, for part g, the successful outcomes for the sum being 7 are 6, and only 2 of those outcomes (2,5, and 5,2) involve the first die being a 2. So, the probability is \( \frac{1}{3} \approx 0.333 \), rounded to three decimal places. Lastly, part h checks the independence of the sum being 7 and the first die showing 2. Similar to part d, the outcome of having the sum of 7 does depend on the first die’s result. Therefore, these events are not independent.