Understanding the Probability of Rolling Three Different Numbers on Dice
When you toss three dice, there are a total of 6 faces on each die, resulting in 6 imes 6 imes 6 = 216 possible outcomes.
Calculating Favorable Outcomes
To find the probability that all three numbers show different faces, we first calculate the number of favorable outcomes:
- For the first die, you can roll any of the 6 faces.
- For the second die, you can only roll 5 different faces (since it must be different from the first die).
- For the third die, you can roll 4 different faces (since it must be different from both the first and second dice).
This gives us a total number of favorable outcomes calculated as follows:
Favorable Outcomes = 6 imes 5 imes 4 = 120
Calculating the Probability
The probability (P) that all numbers rolled are different can be calculated using the formula:
P(All Different) = rac{Favorable ext{ }Outcomes}{Total ext{ }Outcomes}
Using our numbers:
P(All Different) = rac{120}{216}
This fraction simplifies to:
P(All Different) = rac{5}{9}
Conclusion
Thus, the probability that when tossing three dice, all the numbers shown will be different is rac{5}{9}. This means there is a good chance that each die will show a unique number!