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Most water treatment facilities monitor the quality of their drinking water on hourly basis. One variable monitored it is pH, which measures the degree of alkalinity or acidity in the water. A pH below 7.0 is acidic, one above 7.0 is alkaline, and a pH of 7.0 is neutral. One water treatment plant has a target pH of 8.5 (most try to maintain a slightly alkaline level). The mean and standard deviation of 1 hour's test results, based on 12 water samples at this plant are: Mean =8.24 S=.16 Does this sample provide sufficient evidence that the mean pH level in the water differs from 8.5?

User Duckduckgo
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Answer:

we can conclude that there is significant evidence to support the stance that mean pH value in water differs from 8.5

Explanation:

H0 : μ = 8.5

H1 : μ < 8.5

Test statistic :

(xbar - μ) / s/sqrt(n)

(8.24 - 8.5) ÷ (0.16 ÷ √12)

-0.26 ÷ 0.0461880

Test statistic = - 5.63

The Pvalue can be obtained from the test statistic value using a Pvalue calculator :

df = 12 - 1 = 11

Pvalue = 0.000077

Using an α value of 0.05 ; we can conclude that

Pvalue < α ; We reject H0

Hence, we can conclude that there is significant evidence to support the stance that mean pH value in water differs from 8.5

User Nadine
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