A common practice of airline companies is to sell more tickets for a particular flight than there are seats on the plane, because customers who buy tickets do not always show up for the flight. Suppose that the percentage of no-shows at flight time is 4%. For a particular flight with 194 seats, a total of 200 tickets were sold. What is the probability that the airline overbooked this flight? Click here to view page 1 of the standard normal distribution table, Click here to view page 2 of the standard normal distribution table, The probability is (Round to four decimal places as needed.)

Glencoe Algebra 1, Student Edition, 9780079039897, 0079039898, 2018
18th Edition
ISBN:9780079039897
Author:Carter
Publisher:Carter
Chapter10: Statistics
Section10.4: Distributions Of Data
Problem 19PFA
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A common practice of airline companies is to sell more tickets for a particular flight than there are seats on the plane, because customers who buy tickets do not always
show up for the flight. Suppose that the percentage of no-shows at flight time is 4%. For a particular flight with 194 seats, a total of 200 tickets were sold. What is the
probability that the airline overbooked this flight?
Click here to view page 1 of the standard normal distribution table.
Click here to view page 2 of the standard normal distribution table.
The probability is
(Round to four decimal places as needed.)
Transcribed Image Text:A common practice of airline companies is to sell more tickets for a particular flight than there are seats on the plane, because customers who buy tickets do not always show up for the flight. Suppose that the percentage of no-shows at flight time is 4%. For a particular flight with 194 seats, a total of 200 tickets were sold. What is the probability that the airline overbooked this flight? Click here to view page 1 of the standard normal distribution table. Click here to view page 2 of the standard normal distribution table. The probability is (Round to four decimal places as needed.)
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