so there is a spinner, with 5 colors. the spinner starts with green, blue, yellow, orange, then pink.

what is the probability of the spinner landing on the color pink? use theoretical probability

The theoretical probability of the spinner landing on the color pink is 1 out of 5, because there are total of 5 colors on the spinner.

Therefore, the probability is 1/5 = 0.2 or 20%.

how many times would the spinner land on pink? use theoretical probability

If we assume that the spinner is perfectly balanced and each color has an equal chance of being landed on, then the spinner would land on pink 1 out of every 5 spins based on the theoretical probability calculation.

So, if the spinner is spun 100 times, the number of times it would land on pink can be calculated by:
(Number of spins) x (Probability of landing on pink) = Number of times landing on pink
100 x 1/5 = 20

Therefore, the spinner would land on pink 20 times if it is spun 100 times based on the theoretical probability.

how about 20 spins

If the spinner is spun 20 times, we can calculate the number of times it would land on pink based on the theoretical probability:

(Number of spins) x (Probability of landing on pink) = Number of times landing on pink
20 x 1/5 = 4

Therefore, if the spinner is spun 20 times based on theoretical probability, it would land on pink 4 times.

if the spinner landed on green two times, blue five times, yellow six times, orange four times, pink three times, what is the frequency of pink being landed on

Based on the given information, the spinner was spun a total of 20 times, and the outcomes were:

- Green: 2 times
- Blue: 5 times
- Yellow: 6 times
- Orange: 4 times
- Pink: 3 times

Since the spinner was spun 20 times, we can calculate the frequency of each color being landed on by dividing the number of times each color was landed on by the total number of spins:

- Frequency of Pink = Number of times Pink was landed on / Total number of spins
= 3 / 20
= 0.15 or 15%

Therefore, the frequency of the color pink being landed on is 15% when the spinner was spun 20 times.

use experimental probability is you havent

To find the experimental probability of landing on the color pink, we need to calculate the number of times the spinner landed on pink and then divide it by the total number of spins.

Given that the spinner landed on each color the following number of times:
- Green: 2 times
- Blue: 5 times
- Yellow: 6 times
- Orange: 4 times
- Pink: 3 times

The total number of spins was 20.

Experimental Probability of Pink = Number of times Pink was landed on / Total number of spins
Experimental Probability of Pink = 3 / 20
Experimental Probability of Pink = 0.15 or 15%

Therefore, based on the experimental probability, the color pink was landed on about 15% of the time after spinning the spinner 20 times.

why would the experimental probability be different from theoretical?