9:5
p(heads)= 0.5 p(heads)^4= 0.0625
1/8. The probability of flipping a coin three times and it landing on head is 1/2, as a coin only has two sides. You flip a coin three times, therefore the answer is (1/2)^3 = 1/8.
If it is a fir coin, the probability is (1/2)10 = 1/1024.
The probability of flipping a coin 3 times and getting 3 heads is 1/2
There are 8 permutations of flipping a coin 3 times, or of flipping 3 coins one time. They are, with the permutations of two heads bolded...TTTTTHTHTTHHHTTHTHHHTHHH... thus, the probability of flipping a coin 3 times and getting 2 heads is 3 in 8, or 0.375.
The probability of heads is 0.5 each time.The probability of four times is (0.5 x 0.5 x 0.5 x 0.5) = 0.0625 = 1/16 = 6.25% .
What is the chance of it landing on heads twice in a row?
When flipping two fair coins, each coin has a 50% chance of landing on heads. The probability of both coins landing on heads is calculated by multiplying the probabilities of each coin: (0.5 \times 0.5 = 0.25) or 25%. Therefore, the odds against both coins landing on heads are 3 to 1, meaning there are three outcomes (one head and one tail, or two tails) for every one outcome where both coins show heads.
Experimental probability is calculated by taking the data produced from a performed experiment and calculating probability from that data. An example would be flipping a coin. The theoretical probability of landing on heads is 50%, .5 or 1/2, as is the theoretical probability of landing on tails. If during an experiment, however, a coin is flipped 100 times and lands on heads 60 times and tails 40 times, the experimental probability for this experiment for landing on heads is 60%, .6 or 6/10. The experimental probability of landing on tails would be 40%, .4, or 6/10.
1/4
.125
100 percent. it will always land somewhere.