The bell curve is shown below:
a)
We need to find the probability:
![P(70to find it we need to write in terms of z-scores given by:<p></p>[tex]z=(x-\mu)/(\sigma)](https://img.qammunity.org/2023/formulas/mathematics/high-school/dcg4ycdeeql5x99bnoxa85hnieyfsim7sc.png)
where x is the value we are looking for, mu is the mean and sigma is the standard deviation. Using this we have:
[tex]\begin{gathered} P(70Using the properties for distributions and a standard nomal distribution table we have:
[tex]\begin{gathered} P(70
Therefore 90.5% (rounded to three decimal places) of the population is on this interval.b)
We know that unussually high scores in a bell curve are the scores over three standard deviations; then in this case this means scores over 145 points.
c)
In any bell curve 99.73% of the scores are within three standard deviations of the mean.