Weatherwise is a magazine published by the American Meteorological Society. One
ID: 3229885 • Letter: W
Question
Weatherwise is a magazine published by the American Meteorological Society. One issue gives a rating system used to classify Nor'easter storms that frequently hit New England and can cause much damage near the ocean. A severe storm has an average peak wave height of = 16.4 feet for waves hitting the shore. Suppose that a Nor'easter is in progress at the severe storm class rating. Peak wave heights are usually measured from land (using binoculars) off fixed cement piers. Suppose that a reading of 31 waves showed an average wave height of x = 17.4 feet. Previous studies of severe storms indicate that = 3.5 feet. Does this information suggest that the storm is (perhaps temporarily) increasing above the severe rating? Use = 0.01.
(a) What is the level of significance?
State the null and alternate hypotheses.
H0: = 16.4 ft; H1: > 16.4 ft
H0: = 16.4 ft; H1: 16.4 ft
H0: > 16.4 ft; H1: = 16.4 ft
H0: = 16.4 ft; H1: < 16.4 ft
H0: < 16.4 ft; H1: = 16.4 ft
(b) What sampling distribution will you use? Explain the rationale for your choice of sampling distribution.
The standard normal, since the sample size is large and is known.
The Student's t, since the sample size is large and is unknown.
The standard normal, since the sample size is large and is unknown.
The Student's t, since the sample size is large and is known.
What is the value of the sample test statistic? (Round your answer to two decimal places.)
(c) Find the P-value. (Round your answer to four decimal places.)
Sketch the sampling distribution and show the area corresponding to the P-value.
(d) Based on your answers in parts (a) to (c), will you reject or fail to reject the null hypothesis? Are the data statistically significant at level ?
At the = 0.01 level, we reject the null hypothesis and conclude the data are statistically significant.
At the = 0.01 level, we reject the null hypothesis and conclude the data are not statistically significant.
At the = 0.01 level, we fail to reject the null hypothesis and conclude the data are statistically significant.
At the = 0.01 level, we fail to reject the null hypothesis and conclude the data are not statistically significant.
(e) Interpret your conclusion in the context of the application.
There is sufficient evidence at the 0.01 level to conclude that the storm is increasing above the severe rating.
There is insufficient evidence at the 0.01 level to conclude that the storm is increasing above the severe rating.
Explanation / Answer
null and alternate hypotheses.
H0: = 16.4 ft; H1: 16.4 ft
b) we use standard normal, since the sample size is large and is known.
c) Test statistic
Z= 1.5908
P value =0.1117
Conclusion:
P >0.01, we do not reject the H0. Hence claim is not significant
Related Questions
drjack9650@gmail.com
Navigate
Integrity-first tutoring: explanations and feedback only — we do not complete graded work. Learn more.