This sounds like a joke question. If you toss a coin in a train, it lands in the train. If you toss it out the window, or otherwise off the train, it lands on whatever is out there.
On the other hand, assuming this is not a joke, the coin will land where it would if you tossed it if the train were stationary. In other words, the coin is moving at the same velocity as the train before the coin toss, and since that part of its momentum is preserved through the toss, it will land, relative to the train, in the same place. This assumes, of course, that the train is not changing speed during the coin toss, that the windows are not admitting a wind, and so on.
No, when you toss a coin there is a 50 percent chance it will land heads up.
Since it is a fair coin, the probability is 0.5
a Coin Toss
If you toss a coin 10 times and count 58 heads, you know the coin is NOT fair.
football
The coin is traveling at the same velocity as the tosser, so it will land the same as if you were standing still.
No, when you toss a coin there is a 50 percent chance it will land heads up.
If you toss a fair coin 250 times , about how many times should it land on tails?
The probability of a coin landing on heads is 0.5. It does not matter which toss it is, and it does not matter what the toss history was.
No, not if it is a fair coin.
The cast of Toss of the Coin - 2002 includes: Reg Land as Tubber Morgan Lund as Demon Steve Salge as Angel
The chances if someone winning a coin toss are 50/50. Depending on which side of the coin one chooses such as head, when the coin is tossed there is a 50 percent chance that the coin will land on either heads or tails.
You are not allowed to cheat in a coin toss. NEVER!
24 times
The Packers won the coin toss.
Mutually exclusive events are occurrences where, say, a couple of propositions are possible, but if one occurs, the other cannot. A coin toss might be a good example. A coin lands heads or it lands tails. It cannot land on both in the same toss. A coin toss, therefore, can be said to be a mutually exclusive event.
Mutually exclusive events are occurrences where, say, a couple of propositions are possible, but if one occurs, the other cannot. A coin toss might be a good example. A coin lands heads or it lands tails. It cannot land on both in the same toss. A coin toss, therefore, can be said to be a mutually exclusive event.