Respuesta :
Answer:
The experimental probability --> [tex]\frac{13}{20}[/tex]
The theoretical probability --> [tex]\frac{1}{2}[/tex]
Step-by-step explanation:
Key skills needed: Experimental vs theoretical probability, Fractions
1) The first thing you need to understand is experimental probability vs theoretical probability. (Do not include this in your work!!)
- Theoretical probability is based on simple reasoning
- Experimental probability is based on the results a person gets (so the experiment you did by flipping the coin)
2) Now with this, let's start solving:
- Experimental probability ---> [tex]\frac{heads}{total}[/tex] --> You flipped the coin a total of 100 times, so the denominator would be 100. 65 of those would be heads so 65 is our numerator.
- So our experimental probability is --> [tex]\frac{65}{100}[/tex] --> Both have the factor of 5, so take the factor of 5 out of the numerator and denominator and you will get --> [tex]\frac{13}{20}[/tex]
- Now onto theoretical probability --> [tex]\frac{heads}{total}[/tex] --> There are 2 faces of a coin, 1 side is heads, and 1 side is tails --> The total number of faces is 2, so 2 is our denominator. There is only 1 side that is heads, so 1 is the numerator. This means --> Our theoretical probability is [tex]\frac{1}{2}[/tex]
Hope you understood and have a nice day!! :D
Answer:
Experimental Probability: 65/100 We tested the probability 100 times, 65 of those times being heads. So %65 is our experimental probability (in percentage form) of flipping a coin and landing on heads. Simplified, 13/20 is our fraction.
Theoretical Probability: 50/100 or 1/2. There are two sides to a coin, and one is heads, so the theoretical probability is 1/2. In percentage form, the probability would be %50, or 50/100.