Sarah rolled a fair six-sided die 24 times. The table below shows the number of times each number was rolled:

Number Cube Experiment

Number on
the Cube

Number of
Times
Appeared

1 6
2 4
3 0
4 9
5 3
6 2

According to the results in the chart, what is the experimental probability of getting an even number on the die?
fraction 9 over 24 fraction 10 over 24 fraction 15 over 24 fraction 16 over 24

2 happened 4 times

4 happened 9 times
6 happened 2 times

15/24 or 5/8

The theoretical probability would
be 3/6 or 1/2 since half the numbers are even.

Bbnk

idk what the answer is but how did u get it??

2 dice(number cube)was rolled 80 times and the results were recorded as in the table below

To find the experimental probability of getting an even number on the die, we need to divide the number of times an even number appeared by the total number of trials.

According to the table, an even number appeared a total of 6 times (2 times for 6, and 4 times for 2). The total number of trials is given as 24.

So, the experimental probability of getting an even number on the die is:

6 (number of times an even number appeared)
-------------------------------------------
24 (total number of trials)

Simplifying the fraction, we get:

1
- = 1
4

Therefore, the experimental probability of getting an even number on the die is 1/4.

So, the answer is: fraction 1 over 4.