If you roll a pair of fair dice 25 times, the probability of rolling a double six at least once is just above 50% (50.55%).
Anyone can flip a coin four times so I say 100 percent probability. On the other maybe you should ask the odds of the results from four flips.
Theoretical probability = 0.5 Experimental probability = 20% more = 0.6 In 50 tosses, that would imply 30 heads.
Yes, probability can be expressed as a percent. It is common to express probabilities as a percentage, which is calculated by multiplying the probability by 100. For example, if the probability of an event is 0.25, it can also be expressed as 25%.
In the context of the usage 1000%, it would be sure to happen. As far as probability is concerned, the probability of certain is 1 or 100%.
your probability would be 13/13. you would have a 100 percent chance of getting a green marble
The empirical probability can only be determined by carrying out the experiment a very large number of times. Otherwise it would be the theoretical probability.
If you roll a die 100 times, you would expect to get a 1 about 17 times, because the probability of getting a 1 is 1 in 6, or 0.1667. However, that is theoretical probability; experimental probability - the actual results of doing this 100 times - might not be 17, but if you did this a large number of times, the experimental results would indeed begin to approach the theoretical results.
Only one selected 68%
That would be based upon the remainder of the probability it could be anything else, depending upon all of the other choices (red, white, yellow, Caucasian...). For example, if there is a 99 percent chance it's white, and the only two choices are white or black, and there are no external constraints that prevent it from being less than random, there would be a 1 percent probability it would be black.
99 out of 100 is the best.
The probability the shooter makes both shots is .7 * .7 = .49, and the probability of making neither is .3 * .3 = .09. So the probability of making exactly 1 out of 2 is 1 - .49 - .9 = .42, or 42 percent.
The theoretical probability of rolling a 5 on a standard six sided die is one in six. It does not matter how many times you roll it, however, if you roll it 300 times, the theoretical probability is that you would roll a 5 fifty times.