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29 August, 10:04

The daily exchange rates for the five-year period 2003 to 2008 between currency A and currency B are well modeled by a normal distribution with mean 1.094 in currency A (to currency B) and standard deviation 0.013 in currency A. Given this model, and using the 68-95-99.7 rule to approximate the probabilities rather than using technology to find the values more precisely, complete parts (a) through (d). a) What is the probability that on a randomly selected day during this period, a unit of currency B was worth more than 1.094 units of currency A? The probability is nothing %. (Type an integer or a decimal.)

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  1. 29 August, 12:13
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    50% probability that on a randomly selected day during this period, a unit of currency B was worth more than 1.094 units of currency A.

    Step-by-step explanation:

    The Empirical Rule (68-95-99.7 rule) states that, for a normally distributed random variable:

    68% of the measures are within 1 standard deviation of the mean.

    95% of the measures are within 2 standard deviation of the mean.

    99.7% of the measures are within 3 standard deviations of the mean.

    In this problem, we have that:

    Mean = 1.094

    Standard deviation = 0.013

    a) What is the probability that on a randomly selected day during this period, a unit of currency B was worth more than 1.094 units of currency A?

    The normal distribution is symmetric, which means that 50% of the units of currency B are more than 1.094 of currency A and 50% are below.

    So

    50% probability that on a randomly selected day during this period, a unit of currency B was worth more than 1.094 units of currency A.
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