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6 votes
6 votes
The weight of oranges growing in an orchard is normally distributed with a mean

weight of 4 oz. and a standard deviation of 0.5 oz. From a batch of 2000 oranges, how
many would be expected to weight less than 5 oz., to the nearest whole number?

User Paramesh Korrakuti
by
2.9k points

2 Answers

6 votes
6 votes

Answer:

The weight of oranges growing in an orchard is normally distributed with a mean weight of 6.5 oz. and a standard deviation of 1 oz. Using the empirical rule, determine what interval would represent weights of the middle 99.7% of all oranges from this orchard

Explanation:

bran leist ple

User Baron Legendre
by
2.6k points
20 votes
20 votes

Answer:

1954

Explanation:

If a continuous random variable X is normally distributed with mean μ and variance σ²:


\boxed{X \sim \textsf{N}(\mu,\sigma^2)}

Given:

  • mean μ = 4 oz
  • standard deviation σ = 0.5 oz

First find the probability that the weight of an orange is less than 5 oz.


\text{If \;$X \sim \textsf{N}(4,0.5^2)$,\;\;find\;\;P$(X < 5)$}.

Method 1

Using a calculator:


\implies \text{P}(X < 5)=0.977249868

Method 2

Converting to the z-distribution.


\boxed{\text{If\;\;$X \sim$N$(\mu,\sigma^2)$\;\;then\;\;$(X-\mu)/(\sigma)=Z$, \quad where $Z \sim$N$(0,1)$}}


x=5 \implies Z=(5-4)/(0.5)=2

Using the z-tables for the probability:


\implies \text{P}(Z < 2)=0.9772

To find the expected number of oranges that will weigh less than 5 oz from a batch of 2000, multiply the total number of oranges by the probability calculated:


\begin{aligned}2000 * \text{P}(X < 5)&amp;=2000 * 0.977249868\\&amp;=1954.499736\\&amp;=1954\end{aligned}

Therefore, 1954 oranges would be expected to weigh less than 5 oz.

User Andy Mardell
by
2.7k points