- Oct 9, 1999
- 5,203
- 3,832
- 136
I was in Las Vegas for the NAB show a few weeks ago, and as usual I got to talking to a friend about probability at the Roulette wheel. I couldn't explain something to his satisfaction so I'm hoping someone here may be able to help me.
Let's assume that the odds on the Roulette wheel are 50/50, that is that the double zero isn't there.
Now he understands that the chances of red coming up are 50% on EVERY spin of the wheel.
The thing he doesn't understand is the following:
It is unlikely that red will come up say 10 times in a row.
I believe the odds of that are 2^10, right?
Anyway, he thinks that if red comes up nine times in a row, due to the odds of 10 red in a row being very low, somehow there are better odds on betting black. Of course this is ridiculous, but I can't think of a satisfactory way (to him anyway) to explain it to him.
Somehow he things the odds of the 10 in a row string interfere with the 50/50 odds of each spin.
How can I convince him of the truth of this situation?
Let's assume that the odds on the Roulette wheel are 50/50, that is that the double zero isn't there.
Now he understands that the chances of red coming up are 50% on EVERY spin of the wheel.
The thing he doesn't understand is the following:
It is unlikely that red will come up say 10 times in a row.
I believe the odds of that are 2^10, right?
Anyway, he thinks that if red comes up nine times in a row, due to the odds of 10 red in a row being very low, somehow there are better odds on betting black. Of course this is ridiculous, but I can't think of a satisfactory way (to him anyway) to explain it to him.
Somehow he things the odds of the 10 in a row string interfere with the 50/50 odds of each spin.
How can I convince him of the truth of this situation?
