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19 September, 02:44

State police believe that 70% of the drivers traveling on a major interstate highway exceed the speed limit. They plan to set up a radar trap and check the speeds of 80 cars. Taking a random sample of eighty cars is considered sufficiently large for the distribution of the sample proportion to be normally distributed. Would a random sample of 50 cars have been large enough and why?

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  1. 19 September, 05:09
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    With n = 50, both conditions (np > 5, n (1-p) > 5) are satisfied, so a random sample of 50 cars would have been large enough.

    Step-by-step explanation:

    Binomial probability distribution

    Probability of exactly x sucesses on n repeated trials, with p probability.

    Can be approximated to the normal distribution if:

    np > 5, n (1-p) > 5

    70% of the drivers traveling on a major interstate highway exceed the speed limit.

    So p = 0.7.

    Would a random sample of 50 cars have been large enough and why?

    With n = 50

    np = 50*0.7 = 35 > 5

    n (1-p) = 50*0.3 = 15 > 5

    With n = 50, both conditions (np > 5, n (1-p) > 5) are satisfied, so a random sample of 50 cars would have been large enough.
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