Flipping a Coin Multiple Times
Flipping a Coin 100 Times: Understanding Probability
Ever wondered what happens when you flip a coin 100 times? While Google's coin flip tool requires manual flipping for each toss, our simulator makes it easy to track multiple flips and analyze the results in real-time.
Real-Time Statistics
Our coin flip simulator automatically tracks and displays the running total of heads and tails, along with their percentages. This makes it perfect for probability experiments, teaching statistics, or just satisfying curiosity about long sequences of coin flips.
Law of Large Numbers
When flipping a coin multiple times, you'll observe the "Law of Large Numbers" in action. As you approach 100 flips, the distribution between heads and tails tends to even out, approaching the theoretical 50-50 probability. Our statistical tracking feature lets you watch this mathematical principle unfold in real time.
Perfect for Educational Use
Teachers and students can use our simulator to demonstrate probability concepts:
- Track the results of 100 consecutive flips
- Compare actual results with theoretical probability
- Observe how percentages stabilize over many flips
- Study random distribution patterns
True Random vs Pseudo-Random Over Multiple Flips
Using the Web Crypto API ensures that even in long sequences of 100 or more flips, each toss remains truly random and independent. This is crucial for scientific experiments and statistical analysis, providing more reliable results than traditional pseudo-random number generators.
Whether you're conducting a probability experiment, teaching statistics, or just curious about large numbers of coin flips, our simulator provides the tools and tracking you need to understand the results of multiple coin tosses.