Calculating Probability of 4 Heads in a Fair Coin Flip

  • Thread starter Somefantastik
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In summary, the probability of getting four heads in a row from four independent flips of a fair coin is 1/16. This can be verified by calculating the number of ways the four coins can land and dividing it by the total number of possible outcomes. It is not possible to predict which pattern will occur first in a series of four flips, as each of the 16 outcomes is equally likely. However, it is important to differentiate between the probability of a specific subsequence occurring in a series of four flips and the probability of that subsequence occurring in a continuous series of individual flips.
  • #1
Somefantastik
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Given 4 flips of a fair coin, what is the probability of {H,H,H,H}?

I thought since flips of a fair coin are independent, then P(H&H&H&H) = P(H)P(H)P(H)P(H) = 1/(2^4) = 1/16. Am I close?
 
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  • #2
Since these are 4 independent trials, yes.

You can verify this & similar problems by figuring out how many ways 4 coins can "land."
 
  • #3
thanks; you're right. I used the tree-notation and got N(ways HHHH)/N(all ways) = 1/16. Thanks again. I'm not entirely sure why that works.

Is it possible to compute the probability that one pattern comes before the other one? Like THHH will happen before HHHH?
 
  • #4
Each of the 16 possible total outcomes (HHHH through TTTT) is equally possible, so there is no way to predict which will occur before another.

- Warren
 
  • #5
Thanks. I should have known that.
 
  • #6
Remember to distinguish the probability that "THHH" comes before "HHHH" in a series of discrete tuples of four flips from the probability that the subsequence "THHH" comes before "HHHH" in a continuous series of individual flips.
 

1. What is the probability of getting 4 heads in a row when flipping a fair coin?

The probability of getting 4 heads in a row when flipping a fair coin is 1/16 or 6.25%. This is because the probability of getting a head on each flip is 1/2, and the probability of independent events occurring together is found by multiplying their individual probabilities.

2. What is the probability of getting at least 1 tails when flipping 4 coins?

The probability of getting at least 1 tails when flipping 4 coins is 15/16 or 93.75%. This is because the only way to not get at least 1 tails is if all 4 coins land on heads, which has a probability of 1/16. Therefore, the probability of getting at least 1 tails is 1 - 1/16 = 15/16.

3. How many possible outcomes are there when flipping a fair coin 4 times?

There are 16 possible outcomes when flipping a fair coin 4 times. This can be found by multiplying the number of possible outcomes for each flip, which is 2, by the number of flips, which is 4.

4. What is the expected number of heads when flipping a fair coin 4 times?

The expected number of heads when flipping a fair coin 4 times is 2. This can be found by multiplying the probability of getting a head on each flip, which is 1/2, by the number of flips, which is 4.

5. How does the probability of getting 4 heads change if the coin is not fair?

If the coin is not fair, the probability of getting 4 heads will change depending on the bias of the coin. For example, if the coin is biased to land on heads 60% of the time, the probability of getting 4 heads in a row would be (0.6)^4 or 0.1296, which is significantly higher than the probability of getting 4 heads with a fair coin.

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