If both tosses are fair, the probability of that outcome is one in four.
The probability is 0.375
Well, you have 24 possibilities, and you can get heads 6 ways, so it is 1/4.
The probability of flipping a coin and having it land heads in a single flip is 1/2. To find the probability of getting heads in 6 consecutive flips, you multiply the probabilities of each individual flip: (1/2)^6. This results in a probability of 1/64, or approximately 0.0156 (1.56%).
50-50
The probability of rolling a 2 on a die before flipping a heads on a coin is 1 in 12. The probability of rolling a 2 is 1 in 6. The probability of flipping heads is 1 in 2. Since these are sequentially unrelated events, you simply multiply the probabilities together.
The probability is 0.375
The probability of flipping three heads when flipping three coins is 1 in 8, or 0.125. It does not matter if the coins are flipped sequentially or simultaneously, because they are independent events.
The probabilty of you flipping 3 coins and getting all heads or tails is 0.125 or 1/8.
The answer depends on how many coins are flipped, and how often.
The probability of the first coin landing heads is half (or 1/2). Similarly, the probability of the second and third coins landing heads are also 1/2 in each case. Therefore, the probability of having three heads is: (1/2)(1/2)(1/2) = (1/8)
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/If_you_Flip_four_coins_at_once_what_is_probability_of_2_head_and_3_tail" The probability of flipping four coins and getting 2 heads and 3 tails is ZERO 2 heads and 3 tails requires flipping FIVE coins.
0.54 or 0.0625 or 1/16.
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.
It is 1/2.
Well, you have 24 possibilities, and you can get heads 6 ways, so it is 1/4.
50-50
The probability of flipping Heads on a coin is 1 - a certainty - if the coin is flipped often enough. On a single toss of a fair coin the probability is 1/2.