answer:The probability of each outcome in a coin toss is 50% (½) because there are only two possibilities. How many possibilities are there if we toss the coin twice? Four. It can be HH, HT, TH, or TT. So the chance of getting HH is 25% (¼), or ½×½. In other words, it’s the probability of getting heads on the first toss multiplied by the probability of getting heads on the second toss. And it keeps going this way. If you toss a coin 3 times, there are eight possibilities: HHH, HHT, HTH, HTT, THH, THT, TTH, and TTT. That’s ½×½×½ = 12.5%. Assuming you do not want to work out all the possible outcomes for 100 or 500 coin tosses, however, you’ll need a formula for determining the probability of getting at least one run of x heads in a series of y tosses. There are at least three available options. Unfortunately, they all involve rather complicated math. You can find a discussion of them here (search “non-recursive” for the first two and “Fibonacci” for the third, which is also the last on the page).