This cannot be answered the way you asked it.
The reason being is that it is possible (yet inprobable) that you could get 150 heads... or you could get 149 heads, or 148, 147, 146, ....
So there are 150 possible answers to the way you asked it.
However, statistically, one should average about 50% of the time getting heads. This would equate to be 75. The more trials you attempt, the closer you will be to the 50% mark.
75
2. There is heads and there is tails.
30 maybe but i say 35 or 31
The probability of a heads is 1/2. The expected value of independent events is the number of runs times the probability of the desired result. So: 100*(1/2) = 50 heads
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.
75
50%. there are only 2 choices heads or tails and that doesn't change no matter how many times you flip the coin
A fair coin would be expected to land on heads 10 times on average.
Ten of them.
The probability of a flipped coin landing heads or tails will always be 50% either way, no matter how many times you flip it.
It could land on heads any number of times between zero and 150.The most probable result, if the coin is honest and balanced, is 75 times.
2. There is heads and there is tails.
6
as many times as you flip it
There are 24 = 16 ordered outcomes, that is outcomes in which the order of the results is relevant. If not, there are 5 outcomes (0 heads, 1 head, 2 heads, 3 heads and 4 heads).
you cannot predict how many times you get heads or tails but however you can predict the probability it will hit heads or tails only which is don by multiplying 1/2 by itself 5 times
Getting heads is just as likely as getting tails. So the expected number of each is even. There are no other possibilities so you should expect 5 of each. Naturally, if you actually flip a coin 10 times, it may come out 6/4, 4/6, 7/3 or even 10/0, but 5/5 is the most likely outcome.