18
Well, if the spinner has equal sections, and green is one of them, then statistically speaking, you would expect it to land on green about 100 times out of 600 spins. But hey, life's full of surprises, so don't bet your retirement savings on it!
Nhan thooriya theettam nintappan vanneduthu thinnu
250
Around 144 times (60% of 240)
Assuming that each sector is coloured differently and exactly on of them is red, then the probability that the last spin of 6 lands on red is 1/3. Each spin is independent of the previous spin - the spinner has no knowledge to affect its outcome. The gambler's fallacy is that an inanimate object has some "memory" that after a long run of not showing a result it will show that result, or after a long run of showing a result it will not show that result, on the next turn. In fact, in the second case, if the probability is so low that a long run of an event is not very likely (eg tossing a coin 11 times and every toss is a head), then it is likely that the object is actually biased and is more likely than normal probability would suggest to favour repeating the result (as 11 heads in a row is unlikely (but not impossible), it is likely that the coin, or how it is tossed, is biased and so the chance of another 12th head is going to be (much) greater than the normal probability of 1/2).
3/5=g/30
To determine the experimental probability of the spinner landing on blue, you need to conduct a series of spins and record the outcomes. The experimental probability is calculated by dividing the number of times the spinner lands on blue by the total number of spins. For example, if the spinner is spun 100 times and lands on blue 25 times, the experimental probability would be 25/100, or 0.25.
Well, if the spinner has equal sections, and green is one of them, then statistically speaking, you would expect it to land on green about 100 times out of 600 spins. But hey, life's full of surprises, so don't bet your retirement savings on it!
Nhan thooriya theettam nintappan vanneduthu thinnu
According to the laws of probability, there should be 15 LOSE sections and 1 WIN section on this wheel. To say it another way, 1 out of every 16 times the spinner should land on the WIN section. As a decimal, 1/16 is 6%. Simple!
The answer depends on the number of sides on the spinner and how they are numbered.
A fly does not defecate every time it lands but it is not uncommon for them to do so. They do not specifically defecate at certain times or in one place like many insects.
You need to know how many outcomes you have. Is the spinner composed of colors, numbers, names? What categories does the spinner have?
5
About 40-50 can jump at one time!!The world record is 7 spins at once.
You can expect the spinner to land an odd number 25 times out of 50.
I'm assuming that a "1-8 spinner" is similar to an eight-sided die, so the probability of spinning a 10 is zero. When throwing dice, or flipping a coin, etc., each outcome is independent. That is, it's not influenced by the previous outcome(s). So if you get three 8s in a row then the probability of getting an 8 on the fourth throw remains at 1/8. The probability of an 8 on each and every throw is always 1/8.