Bottles of purified water are assumed to contain 250 milliliters of water. There is some variation from bottle to bottle because the filling machine is not perfectly precise. Usually, the distribution of the contents is approximately Normal. An inspector measures the contents of eight randomly selected bottles from one day of production. The results are 249.3, 250.2, 251.0, 248.4, 249.7, 247.3, 249.4, and 251.5 milliliters. Do these data provide convincing evidence at α = 0.05 that the mean amount of water in all the bottles filled that day differs from the target value of 250 milliliters?

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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Bottles of purified water are assumed to contain 250 milliliters of water. There is some variation from bottle to bottle because the filling machine is not perfectly precise. Usually, the distribution of the contents is approximately Normal. An inspector measures the contents of eight randomly selected bottles from one day of production. The results are 249.3, 250.2, 251.0, 248.4, 249.7, 247.3, 249.4, and 251.5 milliliters. Do these data provide convincing evidence at α = 0.05 that the mean amount of water in all the bottles filled that day differs from the target value of 250 milliliters?

 
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