Pregunta
upstudy study bank question image url

The Central Limit Theorem Question 6, 6.4.9-T HW Score: \( 41.67 \%, 5 \) of 12 points Part 2 of 3 Points: of 1 Save An elevator has a placard stating that the maximum capacity is \( 4000 \mathrm{lb}-27 \) passengers. So, 27 adult male passengers can have a mean weight of up to \( 4000 / 27=148 \) pounds. Assume that weights of males are normally distributed with a mean of 182 lb and a standard deviation of 34 lb . a. Find the probability that 1 randomly selected adult male has a weight greater than 148 lb , b. Find the probability that a sample of 27 randomly selected adult males has a mean weight greater than 148 lb . c. What do you conclude about the safety of this elevator? a. The probability that 1 randomly selected adult male has a weight greater than 148 lb is \( \square \) 0.8413 (Round to four decimal places as needed.) b. The probability that a sample of 27 randomly selected adult males has a mean weight greater than 148 lb is \( \square \) (Round to four decimal places as needed.)

Ask by Carter Weston. in the United States
Mar 10,2025

Solución de inteligencia artificial de Upstudy

Respuesta verificada por el tutor

Responder

**Part (a):** The probability that one adult male weighs more than 148 lb is approximately 0.8413. **Part (b):** The probability that the average weight of 27 adult males is greater than 148 lb is almost 1. **Part (c):** The elevator is not safe for 27 adult males because the average weight would likely exceed the maximum capacity.

Solución

**Step 1. Identify the given information** - Mean weight of adult males: \(\mu = 182\) lb - Standard deviation for individual weight: \(\sigma = 34\) lb - Maximum allowable average weight per person per placard: \(\bar{x}_0 = 148\) lb - Sample size for part (b): \(n = 27\) --- **Step 2. Part (a): Probability that one randomly selected adult male weighs more than 148 lb** For a single individual, the weight \(X\) is normally distributed as: \[ X \sim N(182, 34) \] Convert \(X = 148\) lb to a \(z\)-score using: \[ z = \frac{X - \mu}{\sigma} \] Substitute the values: \[ z = \frac{148 - 182}{34} = \frac{-34}{34} = -1 \] The probability that an individual weighs more than 148 lb is: \[ P(X > 148) = P(z > -1) \] Since the standard normal distribution is symmetric, \[ P(z > -1) = 1 - P(z \leq -1) \] From standard normal tables: \[ P(z \leq -1) \approx 0.1587 \] Thus, \[ P(X > 148) \approx 1 - 0.1587 = 0.8413 \] --- **Step 3. Part (b): Probability that the sample mean weight of 27 adult males is greater than 148 lb** The sample mean \(\bar{X}\) is also normally distributed with: \[ \mu_{\bar{X}} = \mu = 182 \quad \text{and} \quad \sigma_{\bar{X}} = \frac{\sigma}{\sqrt{n}} = \frac{34}{\sqrt{27}} \] Compute \(\sigma_{\bar{X}}\): \[ \sqrt{27} \approx 5.196, \quad \sigma_{\bar{X}} \approx \frac{34}{5.196} \approx 6.542 \] Convert \(\bar{X} = 148\) lb to a \(z\)-score for the sample mean: \[ z = \frac{148 - 182}{6.542} = \frac{-34}{6.542} \approx -5.196 \] Find the probability: \[ P(\bar{X} > 148) = P(z > -5.196) \] Since \(-5.196\) is extremely low on the standard normal distribution, almost the entire distribution lies above \(-5.196\). Therefore, \[ P(z > -5.196) \approx 1.0000 \] --- **Step 4. Part (c): Conclusion about the safety of the elevator** - For a single male, the probability of weighing more than 148 lb is approximately \(0.8413\). - For a group of 27 males, the probability that the mean weight exceeds 148 lb is virtually \(1\). This indicates that in almost every case, 27 adult males would have an average weight far exceeding the placard’s limit of 148 lb per person. In fact, the expected total weight for 27 males is: \[ 27 \times 182 = 4914 \text{ lb} \] which is significantly higher than the maximum capacity of 4000 lb. **Conclusion:** The elevator is not safe for 27 adult male passengers as it is very likely to exceed its safe operating weight limit.

Respondido por UpStudy AI y revisado por un tutor profesional

error msg
Explicar
Simplifique esta solución

Bonus Knowledge

To find the probability that one randomly selected adult male weighs more than 148 lb, you would use the Z-score formula: \[ Z = \frac{X - \mu}{\sigma} \] In this case, \(\mu = 182\) lb and \(\sigma = 34\) lb. Plugging in the values gives you \(Z = \frac{148 - 182}{34} = -1\). From the Z-table, the probability of a Z-score being less than -1 is approximately 0.1587. Therefore, the probability of an adult male weighing more than 148 lb is \(1 - 0.1587 = 0.8413\). For part b, when considering a sample of 27 adults, the sampling distribution's standard deviation (standard error) is calculated as: \[ SE = \frac{\sigma}{\sqrt{n}} = \frac{34}{\sqrt{27}} \approx 6.56 \] Now, you can find the Z-score for the sample mean using \(Z = \frac{X - \mu}{SE}\): \[ Z = \frac{148 - 182}{6.56} \approx -5.19 \] Since this Z-score is so low, the probability of getting a mean weight greater than 148 lb is extremely high. Referring to standard normal distribution tables, you would find the probability is effectively 1, or rounded as \(0.9999\) when calculating more specific probabilities. Ultimately, if almost all individuals exceed 148 lb, then the elevator's stated capacity might be overly optimistic, suggesting it may be unsafe if 27 average adult males were to enter at the maximum capacity.

preguntas relacionadas

Question 12(Mulliple Choice Warth 5 points) \[ (04.06 \mathrm{HC}) \] A researcher wants to test the claim that the proportion of juniors who watch television regularly is greater than the proportion of seniors who watch television regularly She finds that 56 of 70 randomly selected juniors and 47 of 85 randomly selected seniors report watching television regularly. Construct \( 95 \% \) confidence intervals for each population proportion. Which of the statemente gives the correct outcome of the research or's tert of the dalim? The \( 95 \% \) confidence interval for juniors is (706, 894), and the \( 95 \% \) confidence interval for seniors is ( 447,659 ). Since the intervals overlap, there is not enough evidence to say the proportion of juniors who watch television regularly may be higher than that of seniors. The \( 95 \% \) confidence interval for juniors is (721, 879), and the \( 95 \% \) confidence interval for seniors is (464, 642). Since the interval for juniors is higher than the interval for seniors, there is evidence to say the proportion of juniors who watch television regularly may be higher than that of seniors. The \( 95 \% \) confidence interval for juniors is ( 706,894 ), and the \( 95 \% \) confidence interval for seniors is ( 447,659 ). Since the interval for juniors is higher than the interval for seniors, there is evidence to say the proportion of juniors who watch television regularly may be higher than that of seniors. The \( 95 \% \) confidence interval for juniors is ( \( 721, .879 \) ), and the \( 95 \% \) confidence interval for seniors is (464, 642). Since the intervals overlap, there is not enough evidence to say the proportion of juniors who watch television regularly may be higher than that of seniors.

Latest Statistics Questions

¡Prueba Premium ahora!
¡Prueba Premium y hazle a Thoth AI preguntas de matemáticas ilimitadas ahora!
Quizas mas tarde Hazte Premium
Estudiar puede ser una verdadera lucha
¿Por qué no estudiarlo en UpStudy?
Seleccione su plan a continuación
Prima

Puedes disfrutar

Empieza ahora
  • Explicaciones paso a paso
  • Tutores expertos en vivo 24/7
  • Número ilimitado de preguntas
  • Sin interrupciones
  • Acceso completo a Respuesta y Solución
  • Acceso completo al chat de PDF, al chat de UpStudy y al chat de navegación
Básico

Totalmente gratis pero limitado

  • Solución limitada
Bienvenido a ¡Estudia ahora!
Inicie sesión para continuar con el recorrido de Thoth AI Chat
Continuar con correo electrónico
O continuar con
Al hacer clic en "Iniciar sesión", acepta nuestros términos y condiciones. Términos de Uso & Política de privacidad