33.7k views
5 votes
Suppose a particular brand of energy bars has come up with a new recipe. They want to know how many energy bars they need to test for calorie content in order to be 94% confident that the sample mean will be within 3 calories of the true mean

User Xlander
by
5.7k points

1 Answer

4 votes

Complete Question

Suppose a particular brand of energy bars has come up with a new recipe. They want to know how many energy bars they need to test for calorie content in order to be 94% confident that the sample mean will be within 3 calories of the true mean? Suppose there is a population standard deviation of 20 calories

Answer:

The value is
n =157

Explanation:

From the question we are told that

The margin of error is
E = 3

The standard deviation is
\sigma = 20

From the question we are told the confidence level is 94% , hence the level of significance is


\alpha = (100 - 94 ) \%

=>
\alpha = 0.06 \

Generally from the normal distribution table the critical value of
(\alpha )/(2) is


Z_{(\alpha )/(2) } =  1.881

Generally the sample size is mathematically represented as


n = [\frac{Z_{(\alpha )/(2) } *  \sigma }{E} ] ^2

=>
n = [\frac{1.881 } *  20 }{3} ] ^2

=>
n =157

User Hyunmin Kim
by
5.2k points