Asked by lijm
Justify if the following is a binomial.
Rolling a fair die 3 times and observing the number that appears uppermost.
There are 3 trials. So that is fixed. But there doesn't seem to be the two outcomes of success and failure. It isn't really clear in this question.
Rolling a fair die 3 times and observing the number that appears uppermost.
There are 3 trials. So that is fixed. But there doesn't seem to be the two outcomes of success and failure. It isn't really clear in this question.
Answers
Answered by
lijm
If it doesn't meet every single rule, then it is not a binomial?
Answered by
Damon
No, earlier problem down below your success was drawing number 6 all three times and failure was any of the other five. That is binary.
If success is drawing the number six three times then your chance is
1/6 * 1/6 * 1/6 = 1/216 , binomial
If success is drawing the number six three times then your chance is
1/6 * 1/6 * 1/6 = 1/216 , binomial
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