9
16
6
The sample space is H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, T1, T2, T3, T4, T5.
7
There are 210 total possible outcomes from flipping a coin 10 times.There is one possible outcome where there are 0 heads.There are 10 possible outcomes where there is 1 head.So there are 210 - 11 possible outcomes with at least 2 heads.(1013)
Six times the number of different outcomes on the spinner.
16
Yes, you could do that.
6
There are 25 or 32 possible outcomes can you get by tossing 5 coins.
3/8. And the coin tossing is totally irrelevant.
There are 23 = 8 possible outcomes.
There are 26 = 64 possible outcomes.
3/16
Presuming that the spinner and the number cube are both "fair", then no - spinning the spinner and tossing the six-sided number cube are called statistically independent events. They do not influence each other, and it does not matter which order the events occur in.
The sample space is H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, T1, T2, T3, T4, T5.
When tossing 4 coins at once, each coin has 2 possible outcomes: heads (H) or tails (T). Therefore, the total number of possible outcomes can be calculated as (2^4), which equals 16. This means there are 16 different combinations of heads and tails when tossing 4 coins.