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2006 AIME II Problems/Problem 5

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Problem

When rolling a certain unfair six-sided die with faces numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, the probability of obtaining face is greater than , the probability of obtaining the face opposite is less than , the probability of obtaining any one of the other four faces is , and the sum of the numbers on opposite faces is 7. When two such dice are rolled, the probability of obtaining a sum of 7 is . Given that the probability of obtaining face is where and are relatively prime positive integers, find

Solution

Without loss of generality, assume that face has a 6, so the opposite face has a 1. Let be the probability of rolling a number on one die and let be the probability of rolling a number on the other die. 7 can be obtained by rolling a 2 and 5, 5 and 2, 3 and 4, or 4 and 3. Each has a probability of \frac{1}{6} \cdot \frac{1}{6} = \frac{1}{36}, totaling 4 \cdot \frac{1}{36} = \frac{1}{9}. Subtracting all these probabilities from leaves chance of getting a 1 on die and a 6 on die or a 6 on die and a 1 on die :

A(6)\cdot B(1)+B(6)\cdot A(1)=\frac{5}{96}

Since the two dice are identical, and so

\begin{align*}A(1)\cdot A(6)+A(1)\cdot A(6)&=\frac{5}{96}\\A(1)\cdot A(6)&=\frac{5}{192}\end{align*}

Also, we know that A(2)=A(3)=A(4)=A(5)=\frac{1}{6} and that the total probability must be , so:

A(1)+4 \cdot \frac{1}{6}+A(6)=\frac{6}{6} \Longrightarrow A(1)+A(6)=\frac{1}{3}

Combining the equations:

\begin{align*}A(6)\left(\frac{1}{3}-A(6)\right)&=\frac{5}{192}\\0 &= 192 \left(A(6)\right)^2 - 64 \left(A(6)\right) + 5\\A(6)&=\frac{64\pm\sqrt{64^2 - 4 \cdot 5 \cdot 192}}{2\cdot192} =\frac{5}{24}, \frac{1}{8}\end{align*} We know that , so it can't be . Therefore, the probability is and the answer is .

Note also that the initial assumption that face was the face labelled 6 is unnecessary -- we would have carried out exactly the same steps and found exactly the same probability no matter which face it was.

See also

2006 AIME II (ProblemsResources)
Preceded by
Problem 4
Followed by
Problem 6
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
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