Since 1938, Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States has been on the obverse side of the Nickel.
There are eight possible results when flipping three coins (eliminating the highly unlikely scenario of one or more coins landing on their edge): Dime - Heads / Nickel - Heads / Penny - Heads Dime - Heads / Nickel - Heads / Penny - Tails Dime - Heads / Nickel - Tails / Penny - Heads Dime - Heads / Nickel - Tails / Penny - Tails Dime - Tails / Nickel - Heads / Penny - Heads Dime - Tails / Nickel - Heads / Penny - Tails Dime - Tails / Nickel - Tails / Penny - Heads Dime - Tails / Nickel - Tails / Penny - Tails
On the obverse (heads) side is an image of President Thomas Jefferson, and the reverse (tails) shows his home Monticello.
The probability is 0.5
The Liberty Nickel is a USA 5 cent coin which was minted from 1883 to 1912, bearing the image of Lady Liberty on the obverse [heads] side of the coin and a large letter "V" on the reverse [tails] side of he coin.
It is a magician's coin manufactured from two genuine nickels and usually selling in novelty catalogs for about $8 or on eBay for $2-$3. It's a novelty coin, manufactured for people who want to flip a coin and know what the results will be.
The technical name for the heads side of a coin in obverse, and the tails side is called reverse The technical name for the heads side of a coin in obverse, and the tails side is called reverse
The right side
The side with a head on it.
The silver and the nickel 3 cent coins minted in 1865 are 2 different coins and look different. The silver 3 cent coin minted in 1865 has a star on the obversed [heads] side of the coin and the reverse [tails] side has a large letter "C" with a Roman Numeral III [3] inside of it. This coin is smaller than a present day dime. The nickel 3 cent coin minted in 1865 has on the obverse [heads] side of the coin an image of Lady Liberty facing left while the reverse [tails] side of the coin has a large Roman Numeral III [3] surrounded by a wreath. This coin is the same size as todays dime.
The heads side is called the OBVERSE and the tails side is called the REVERSE. The difficulty is that not all coins have an obvious heads and tails side. For instance, most British Commonwealth coins depict the monarch on one side and a denomination/country-specific image on the other. By convention the side with the monarch's head is normally considered to be the heads side
the head on the headside of the nickel is thomas Jefferson