ChatterBank9 mins ago
Microwave Oven
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In a certain microwave oven on high power, the time it takes a randomly chosen kernel of popcorn to pop is normally distributed with a mean of 140 seconds and a standard deviation of 25 seconds. What percentage of kernels will fail to pop if the popcorn is cooked for
(a) 2 minutes? (b) 3 minutes? (c) if you wanted 95% of the kernels to pop, what time would you allow? (d) If you wanted 99% to pop?
(a) 2 minutes? (b) 3 minutes? (c) if you wanted 95% of the kernels to pop, what time would you allow? (d) If you wanted 99% to pop?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You can use the NORMDIST function in Excel to plug in the values you have and extract those you require.
Approximately 68% of grains will pop within 1SD either side of the mean. This means around 16% will pop below the 115s value and another 16% will fail to pop unless you cook them for more than 165s. Similarly approx 95% pop within 2SD of the mean and 99% within 3SD. You can use these facts to second guess the values you calculate.
Using NORMDIST with a value of 120s gives 21.2% popped, so 78.8% unpopped.
A value of 180s gives 94.5% so 4.5% unpopped.
A bit of trial and error inserting different time values (I'm sure I could have used a goal-seek formula, but it is 2 in the morning!) gives 181.2s to produce 95% popped and 198.2s to give 99%.
I imagine if you're actually doing a stats course you have formulae which would produce similar values if you bothered to use them?
Approximately 68% of grains will pop within 1SD either side of the mean. This means around 16% will pop below the 115s value and another 16% will fail to pop unless you cook them for more than 165s. Similarly approx 95% pop within 2SD of the mean and 99% within 3SD. You can use these facts to second guess the values you calculate.
Using NORMDIST with a value of 120s gives 21.2% popped, so 78.8% unpopped.
A value of 180s gives 94.5% so 4.5% unpopped.
A bit of trial and error inserting different time values (I'm sure I could have used a goal-seek formula, but it is 2 in the morning!) gives 181.2s to produce 95% popped and 198.2s to give 99%.
I imagine if you're actually doing a stats course you have formulae which would produce similar values if you bothered to use them?