More cereal In Exercise 51, we poured a large and a small bowl of cereal from a box. Suppose the amount of cereal that the manufacturer puts in the boxes is a random variable with mean 16.2 ounces and...


More cereal In Exercise 51, we poured a large and a small bowl of cereal from a box. Suppose the amount of cereal that the manufacturer puts in the boxes is a random variable with mean 16.2 ounces and standard deviation 0.1 ounces.


 a) Find the expected amount of cereal left in the box.


 b) What’s the standard deviation?


 c) If the weight of the remaining cereal can be described by a Normal model, what’s the probability that the box still contains more than 13 ounces?


Exercise 51


Cereal The amount of cereal that can be poured into a small bowl varies with a mean of 1.5 ounces and a standard deviation of 0.3 ounces. A large bowl holds a mean of 2.5 ounces with a standard deviation of 0.4 ounces. You open a new box of cereal and pour one large and one small bowl.


 a) How much more cereal do you expect to be in the large bowl?


 b) What’s the standard deviation of this difference?


 c) If the difference follows a Normal model, what’s the probability the small bowl contains more cereal than the large one?


 d) What are the mean and standard deviation of the total amount of cereal in the two bowls?


 e) If the total follows a Normal model, what’s the probability you poured out more than 4.5 ounces of cereal in the two bowls together?


 f) The amount of cereal the manufacturer puts in the boxes is a random variable with a mean of 16.3 ounces and a standard deviation of 0.2 ounces. Find the expected amount of cereal left in the box and the standard deviation.


May 18, 2022
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