A variety of variables were measured for all tornadoes in the United States in 2017. (b) Test whether a lower proportion of F0 tornadoes occur in Georgia than nationally. The summarized data show that...


A variety of variables were measured for all tornadoes in the United States in 2017.<br>(b) Test whether a lower proportion of F0 tornadoes occur in Georgia than nationally. The summarized data show that 43 of 118 tornadoes in Georgia were F0 during 2017.<br>State the null and alternative hypotheses.<br>Họ:<br>H,:<br>(Type integers or decimals. Do not round.)<br>Because the data is treated as a simple random sample; npo(1- Po) =<br>V10; and the sample size n is less than 5% of the population size, we may use the normal model to test the hypothesis.<br>Choose the correct P-value below.<br>O A. >0.1<br>O B. 0.1> P-value > 0.05<br>C. 0.05 > P-value > 0.01<br>O D. 0.01 > P-value > 0.001<br>O E. <0.001<br>Because the P-value<br>V less than the level of significance we<br>reject the statement in the null hypothesis. There<br>V sufficient evidence to conclude the proportion of tornadoes in the state of Georgia is<br>(Type an integer or a decimal. Do not round.)<br>(c) Estimate the proportion of F0 tornadoes that occur in Georgia with 95% confidence. Interpret the result.<br>We are 95% confident the proportion of F0 tornadoes that occur in Georgia is between<br>and<br>(Type integers or decimals rounded to three decimal places as needed.)<br>

Extracted text: A variety of variables were measured for all tornadoes in the United States in 2017. (b) Test whether a lower proportion of F0 tornadoes occur in Georgia than nationally. The summarized data show that 43 of 118 tornadoes in Georgia were F0 during 2017. State the null and alternative hypotheses. Họ: H,: (Type integers or decimals. Do not round.) Because the data is treated as a simple random sample; npo(1- Po) = V10; and the sample size n is less than 5% of the population size, we may use the normal model to test the hypothesis. Choose the correct P-value below. O A. >0.1 O B. 0.1> P-value > 0.05 C. 0.05 > P-value > 0.01 O D. 0.01 > P-value > 0.001 O E. <0.001 because="" the="" p-value="" v="" less="" than="" the="" level="" of="" significance="" we="" reject="" the="" statement="" in="" the="" null="" hypothesis.="" there="" v="" sufficient="" evidence="" to="" conclude="" the="" proportion="" of="" tornadoes="" in="" the="" state="" of="" georgia="" is="" (type="" an="" integer="" or="" a="" decimal.="" do="" not="" round.)="" (c)="" estimate="" the="" proportion="" of="" f0="" tornadoes="" that="" occur="" in="" georgia="" with="" 95%="" confidence.="" interpret="" the="" result.="" we="" are="" 95%="" confident="" the="" proportion="" of="" f0="" tornadoes="" that="" occur="" in="" georgia="" is="" between="" and="" (type="" integers="" or="" decimals="" rounded="" to="" three="" decimal="" places="" as="">
A variety of variables were measured for all tornadoes in the United States in 2017.<br>(a) Since 1950, the proportion of tornadoes that have been F0 is 0.465. Test whether a different proportion of F0 tornadoes occur in Texas than nationally. Note: Treat the tornadoes that struck in Texas as a simple random sample of all<br>tornadoes that struck Texas since 1950 using a 0.05 level of significance. The summarized data show that 82 of 168 tornadoes in Texas were F0 during 2017.<br>State the null and alternative hypotheses.<br>Họ:<br>H1:<br>(Type integers or decimals. Do not round.)<br>Because the data is treated as a simple random sample; npo(1- Po)<br>V10: and the sample size n is less than 5% of the population size, we may<br>the normal model to test the hypothesis.<br>The P-value is.<br>(Type integers or decimals rounded to four decimal places as needed.)<br>If we obtained 100 independent random samples of size 168 from the state of Texas, we would expect<br>(Type integers or decimals rounded to three decimal places as needed.)<br>of them to result in a sample proportion as extreme or more extreme than<br>if the population proportion of F0 tornadoes was<br>Because the P-value<br>V less than the level of significance we<br>V reject the statement in the null hypothesis. There<br>V sufficient evidence to conclude the proportion of tornadoes in the state of Texas is<br>(Type an integer or decimal. Do not round.)<br>

Extracted text: A variety of variables were measured for all tornadoes in the United States in 2017. (a) Since 1950, the proportion of tornadoes that have been F0 is 0.465. Test whether a different proportion of F0 tornadoes occur in Texas than nationally. Note: Treat the tornadoes that struck in Texas as a simple random sample of all tornadoes that struck Texas since 1950 using a 0.05 level of significance. The summarized data show that 82 of 168 tornadoes in Texas were F0 during 2017. State the null and alternative hypotheses. Họ: H1: (Type integers or decimals. Do not round.) Because the data is treated as a simple random sample; npo(1- Po) V10: and the sample size n is less than 5% of the population size, we may the normal model to test the hypothesis. The P-value is. (Type integers or decimals rounded to four decimal places as needed.) If we obtained 100 independent random samples of size 168 from the state of Texas, we would expect (Type integers or decimals rounded to three decimal places as needed.) of them to result in a sample proportion as extreme or more extreme than if the population proportion of F0 tornadoes was Because the P-value V less than the level of significance we V reject the statement in the null hypothesis. There V sufficient evidence to conclude the proportion of tornadoes in the state of Texas is (Type an integer or decimal. Do not round.)
Jun 07, 2022
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