Math, asked by saikushalsaikushal, 2 months ago

when a coin is tossed twice getting not two tails​

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Answered by MaTaehyung
2

Answer:

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When a coin is tossed twice, the coin has no memory of whether it came up heads or tails the first time, so the second toss of the coin is independent. The two outcomes (heads or tails) are therefore mututally exclusive; if the coin comes up heads on a single toss, it cannot come up tails on the same toss.

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