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Date May 2012 Marks available 6 Reference code 12M.2.hl.TZ2.10
Level HL only Paper 2 Time zone TZ2
Command term Find Question number 10 Adapted from N/A

Question

A market stall sells apples, pears and plums.

The weights of the apples are normally distributed with a mean of 200 grams and a standard deviation of 25 grams.

(i)     Given that there are 450 apples on the stall, what is the expected number of apples with a weight of more than 225 grams?

(ii)     Given that 70 % of the apples weigh less than m grams, find the value of m .

[5]
a.

The weights of the pears are normally distributed with a mean of ∝ grams and a standard deviation of \(\sigma \) grams. Given that 8 % of these pears have a weight of more than 270 grams and 15 % have a weight less than 250 grams, find ∝ and \(\sigma \) .

[6]
b.

The weights of the plums are normally distributed with a mean of 80 grams and a standard deviation of 4 grams. 5 plums are chosen at random. What is the probability that exactly 3 of them weigh more than 82 grams?

[3]
c.

Markscheme

(i)     \({\text{P}}(X > 225) = 0.158...\)     (M1)(A1)

expected number \( = 450 \times 0.158... = 71.4\)     A1

 

(ii)     \({\text{P}}(X < m) = 0.7\)     (M1)

\( \Rightarrow m = 213{\text{ (grams)}}\)     A1

[5 marks]

a.

\(\frac{{270 - \mu }}{\sigma } = 1.40...\)     (M1)A1

\(\frac{{250 - \mu }}{\sigma } = - 1.03...\)     A1 

Note: These could be seen in graphical form.

 

solving simultaneously     (M1)

\(\mu  = 258,{\text{ }}\sigma  = 8.19\)     A1A1

[6 marks]

b.

\(X \sim {\text{N}}({80,4^2})\)

\({\text{P}}(X > 82) = 0.3085...\)     A1

recognition of the use of binomial distribution.     (M1)

\(X \sim {\text{B}}(5,\,0.3085...)\)

\({\text{P}}(X = 3) = 0.140\)     A1

[3 marks]

c.

Examiners report

This was an accessible question for most students with many wholly correct answers seen. In part (b) a few candidates struggled to find the correct values from the calculator and in part (c) a small minority did not see the need to treat it as a binomial distribution.

a.

This was an accessible question for most students with many wholly correct answers seen. In part (b) a few candidates struggled to find the correct values from the calculator and in part (c) a small minority did not see the need to treat it as a binomial distribution.

b.

This was an accessible question for most students with many wholly correct answers seen. In part (b) a few candidates struggled to find the correct values from the calculator and in part (c) a small minority did not see the need to treat it as a binomial distribution.

c.

Syllabus sections

Topic 5 - Core: Statistics and probability » 5.7 » Normal distribution.
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