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6 April, 18:50

if in the study of the lifetime of 60-watt light bulbs it was desired to have a margin of error no larger than 6 hours with 99% confidence, how many randomly selected 60-watt light bulbs should be tested to achieve this result

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  1. 6 April, 20:25
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    The question is incomplete! Complete question along with answer and step by step explanation is provided below.

    Question:

    The lifetime (in hours) of a 60-watt light bulb is a random variable that has a Normal distribution with σ = 30 hours. A random sample of 25 bulbs put on test produced a sample mean lifetime of = 1038 hours.

    If in the study of the lifetime of 60-watt light bulbs it was desired to have a margin of error no larger than 6 hours with 99% confidence, how many randomly selected 60-watt light bulbs should be tested to achieve this result?

    Given Information:

    standard deviation = σ = 30 hours

    confidence level = 99%

    Margin of error = 6 hours

    Required Information:

    sample size = n = ?

    Answer:

    sample size = n ≈ 165

    Step-by-step explanation:

    We know that margin of error is given by

    Margin of error = z * (σ/√n)

    Where z is the corresponding confidence level score, σ is the standard deviation and n is the sample size

    √n = z*σ/Margin of error

    squaring both sides

    n = (z*σ/Margin of error) ²

    For 99% confidence level the z-score is 2.576

    n = (2.576*30/6) ²

    n = 164.73

    since number of bulbs cannot be in fraction so rounding off yields

    n ≈ 165

    Therefore, a sample size of 165 bulbs is needed to ensure a margin of error not greater than 6 hours.
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