The experimental probability of a coin landing on heads is 7/
12. if the coin landed on tails 30 timefind the number of tosses?
The probability is 0 because she has never been near a forest.
2 to 1
A biased probability is one where not every outcome has the same chance of occurring. A biased coin is one where one side, the "heads" or "tails" has a greater probability than the other of showing. A coin which has a centre of gravity closer to the tails side than the heads side would be biased in that heads is more likely to show than tails. The size of coin can have an effect on the probability of heads and tails - during the Royal Institute Christmas lectures in the 1990s demonstrating probability a large version of the pound coin was made to be able to allow the audience to see it being tossed - on the broadcast (and tape) version it landed and stayed on its edge! showing the probability of heads = tails ≠ ½; the probability of heads = probability of tails, but they are actually slightly less than ½ as the coin could land on its edge and stay there - with a standard size coin, if it lands on its edge it takes very little for the centre of gravity to shift outside the base of the edge and for the coin to fall over, but with a very large similar coin (ie one scaled up [proportionally] in lengths) it can take quite a bit before the centre of gravity goes outside the base if it lands on its edge which forces it to fall over (plus there will be a "significant" rise in the centre of gravity to do so, thus favouring stability on an edge which does not exist in the standard, small, sized version of the coin).
Adverbs that can be used for the verb landed include safely and gently.
Velocity = delta X/ delta t in this case..... V = X/t or, since we want X, which is the position on " how far landed " X = V * t 96 m/s * 17 s = 1632 meters away ( over a mile )
The answer is 72.
Given, The probability of getting red, P(R) = 1/8 Red occurs by the spinner= 6 times Let, the total number of trials = N Therefore, for the experimental probability the total number of trials performed can be calculated by the following equation: P(R) = (Red occurs by the spinner)/(Total number of trials) Or, 1/8 = 6/N Or, N = 6 × 8 Or, N = 48 Final Answer: A spinner landed on red 6 times. If the resulting experimental probability of the spinner landing on red is StartFraction 1 over 8 EndFraction, then 48 trials were performed.
1/2
T = H + 10 T + H = 42 so T = 26, H = 16 Therefore Prob(T) = 26/42 = 0.6190
The answer depends on WHAT is landed: a number cube, a tetrahedral die, some other polyhedron, a spinner?
The noun form of "landed" is "landing."
The probability is 0 because she has never been near a forest.
By sticking their landing sticks to the moon craters.
Nothing is possible. There is just... land,landed,and landing.
Probes have landed on Venus
It is called the Eagle.
Ok if the probability of getting yellow is 9/16 then the prob of getting red is 7/16. If we got red 35 times during the experiment that means the number of tosses was 80. Since 35/n = 7/16 where n = the number of tosses Answer: n = 80 tosses