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Buffon coin problem

Buffon's experiments are very old and famous random experiments, named after Compte De Buffon.
These experiments are considered to be among the first problems in geometric probability. Buffon's Coin
Experiment

Buffon's coin experiment consists of dropping a coin randomly on a floor covered with identically shaped
tiles. The event of interest is that the coin crosses a crack between tiles. We will model Buffon's coin
problem with square tiles of side length 1 (assuming the side length is 1 is equivalent to taking the side
length as the unit of measurement).

Overview: Toss a coin at the grid. What is the probability that the coin does not cross a grid line?
How does that probability change if you change the size or shape of the grid? or the size of the
coin?

 Use the 'Toss once' and 'Toss 100 times' buttons to toss the coin at the grid. Note that
the coin will land completely within the grid; it will not cross the outside border.
 When the coin lands, the center is either orange or blue.
o An orange center indicates that the coin crossed a grid line.
o The blue center indicates that the coin did not cross a grid line.
 A running count of the number of tosses and the number of successes (the coin lands
without crossing any lines) is displayed on the right panel of the applet.
 When the coin is tossed multiple times, outlines indicating where the coin landed on
previous tosses are displayed.
 When the 'Show Centers Only' checkbox is selected, the center marks, again either blue
or orange, of previous tosses are displayed rather than the full outlines.

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