I am guessing SamJoe, means SAM and JOE not one person, so three people flip a coin, we have two outcomes each times, so 23= 8 possible outcomes. If you had n people, there would be 2n outcomes. For example, if two people flip there are 4 outcomes HH TT HT or TH
There is 2 outcomes for flipping the coin, and 6 outcomes for rolling the cube. The total outcomes for both are 2*6 = 12.
There are 2 possibilities for each toss. Since the three tosses are independent (one trial does not affect the outcome of the other trials), there are 2 * 2 * 2 = 8 total possible outcomes. The outcomes are: HHH HHT HTH HTT THH THT TTH TTT
24 or 16
Two times the number of outcomes of the spin - which is not specified in the question.
If you flip a coin 2 times, there are 4 possible outcomes; HH, HT, TH, TT.
Four outcomes, three combinations.
2*2*6 = 24 outcomes.
I am guessing SamJoe, means SAM and JOE not one person, so three people flip a coin, we have two outcomes each times, so 23= 8 possible outcomes. If you had n people, there would be 2n outcomes. For example, if two people flip there are 4 outcomes HH TT HT or TH
Two possible outcomes for each flip. 2,048 possible histories of 11 flips.
If you can identify the outcomes with who flipped each coin: eg Joe and Mary = Heads, Sam = Tails, then 23 = 8. Otherwise, 4.
The sample space consists of all the possible outcomes. A flip of a coin has 2 outcomes, H,T. The total number of outcomes for 6 flips are 26 or 64.
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).
3 ways, out of 12 possible outcomes.
enless you include it landing on it's side the two possible outcomes for this are: Heads and Tails
Two mutually exclusive outcomes. You flip a coin, and only heads and tails are possible.
Two