(0.5)n
The probability of tossing two heads in two coins is 0.25.
The probability that both coins are heads is the probability of one coin landing heads multiplied by the probability of the second coin landing heads: (.5) * (.5) = .25 or (1/2) * (1/2) = 1/4
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 answer depends on how many times the coin is tossed. The probability is zero if the coin is tossed only once! Making some assumptions and rewording your question as "If I toss a fair coin twice, what is the probability it comes up heads both times" then the probability of it being heads on any given toss is 0.5, and the probability of it being heads on both tosses is 0.5 x 0.5 = 0.25. If you toss it three times and want to know what the probability of it being heads exactly twice is, then the calculation is more complicated, but it comes out to 0.375.
1/4
It is 1/2^7 = 1/128.
The probability of tossing two heads in two coins is 0.25.
Coins do not have numbers, there is only the probability of heads or tails.
If they are fair coins, it is 1/16.
The probability that both coins are heads is the probability of one coin landing heads multiplied by the probability of the second coin landing heads: (.5) * (.5) = .25 or (1/2) * (1/2) = 1/4
There is a probability of 0.5 of heads on each coin, so there is a 1/2 * 1/2 *1/2 = 1/8 = 0.125 chance that all coins land heads. You can also express this as a percentage, 12.5% chance. The odds are 1 in 8 that this can happen.
1 chance in 4
6/16 = 3/8
The probability that exactly one will land heads up is 0.15625
It is the event that one of the two coins lands showing tails and the other shows heads.
2/9
The probability is 1/21/21/2*1/2=1/16, or 0.0625 or 6.25%