Answer:
a. As this is a one-sample two-tailed t-test for the mean, the null and alternative hypothesis are:
b. Conditions:
Randomization condition: the sample is selected randomly.
10% condition: the sample represents less than 10% of the population.
Nearly normal condition: the temperature is unimodal and symmetrical, so it can be approximated to a normal distribution.
c. In the step-by-step explanation.
d. There is strong evidence (signficance level α=0.05) to support the claim that the mean body temperature for adults is significantly different from 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
The P-value (P=0.003) shows that a sample result like this has very low prorbability if the null hypothesis is true, so it allows to think that the null hypothesis is not really correct.
Explanation:
This is a hypothesis test for the population mean.
The claim is that the mean body temperature for adults is significantly different from 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. So this is a two-tailed test.
Then, the null and alternative hypothesis are:
The significance level is assumed to be 0.05.
The sample has a size n=25.
The sample mean is M=98.2.
As the standard deviation of the population is not known, we estimate it with the sample standard deviation, that has a value of s=0.6.
The estimated standard error of the mean is computed using the formula:
Then, we can calculate the t-statistic as:
The degrees of freedom for this sample size are:
This test is a two-tailed test, with 24 degrees of freedom and t=-3.33, so the P-value for this test is calculated as (using a t-table):
As the P-value (0.003) is smaller than the significance level (0.05), the effect is significant.
The null hypothesis is rejected.
There is strong evidence (signficance level α=0.05) to support the claim that the mean body temperature for adults is significantly different from 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit.