50% chance.
The probability of getting two tails when tossing a coin is zero, because the coin can only have one result. If, one the other hand, you toss the coin twice, then the probability of getting two tails is 0.25, i.e. the probability of one tail, 0.5, squared.
The probability of tossing a coin 5 times and getting all tails is:P(TTTTT) = (1/2)5 = 0.03125 ≈ 3.13%
Since each event is independent, the probability remains at 0.5.
The probability of tossing a coin twice and getting tails both times is 1 in 4, or 25%. If you have already tossed a coin and had it land on tails, the probability that it will land on tails again the next time you toss it is 50%.
The probability of tossing a coin and getting heads is 0.5
It is 60/100 = 0.6
one out of 5 or 2 out of 10
Zero. Since coins land on Heads or Tails and not numbers.
Assuming it is a fair coin, the probability is 1/24 = 1/16.
3 out of 6
1 in 4
To find the probability of rolling a 5 on a die and then tossing tails on a coin, we first determine the individual probabilities. The probability of rolling a 5 on a standard six-sided die is ( \frac{1}{6} ), and the probability of tossing tails on a coin is ( \frac{1}{2} ). Since these two events are independent, we multiply their probabilities: [ P(5 \text{ and tails}) = P(5) \times P(tails) = \frac{1}{6} \times \frac{1}{2} = \frac{1}{12}. ] Thus, the probability of rolling a 5 and then tossing tails is ( \frac{1}{12} ).