What about it? This is a incomplete question.
When an elevator is moving downward, its acceleration changes to be negative, meaning it is slowing down.
If you are standing in an elevator moving up at a steady speed of 1 meter per second, your motion relative to the elevator is considered at rest. This means that you are moving along with the elevator at the same speed and direction, so you do not feel any relative motion inside the elevator.
As the coin is tossed upward, its velocity decreases due to the pull of gravity working against it. At the peak of its ascent, the velocity momentarily drops to zero before it starts descending back down.
A coin makes a metallic clinking sound when dropped or tossed on a hard surface. The exact sound can vary depending on the size and material composition of the coin.
When the elevator stops moving, the reading on the scale will briefly increase before returning to the original reading. This is due to the inertia acting on the person's body and affecting the scale reading as the elevator decelerates.
I assume you mean, the cables that sustain the elevator break.The coin will maintain its relative movement relative to the elevator. For example, if at the moment the elevator disconnects the coin is moving upward at 1 m/s (with respect to the elevator), it will continue going upward at the same speed (once again, with respect to the elevator), until it hits the ceiling. This is because both the elevator and the coin will accelerate downward at the same rate.
A ball, a coin, and a salad are all things that can be tossed. A ball can be tossed in a game of catch or basketball, a coin can be tossed to make a decision, and a salad can be tossed with dressing to mix the ingredients together evenly.
elevator itself.
If a coin is tossed 15 times there are 215 or 32768 possible outcomes.
Eight.
The odds that a tossed coin will land tails side down remain one in two no matter how many times the coin has previously been tossed.
There are 72 permutations of two dice and one coin.
The odds are 50/50. A tossed coin does not have a memory.
7878
They are all tossed
48
The number of times a coin is tossed does not alter the probability of getting heads, which is 50% in every case, as long as the coin has not been rigged (i.e., a double-headed coin, a weighted coin) to alter the result.