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Course: GE 3850, Fall 2008
School: Mich Tech
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o (b) (d) o Figure 8 .6 C omparison f d rawdown c onesa t a g iven t ime f or a quifers f ( ( t (a) ow t ransmissivity;b) h igh t ransmissivity;c) l ow s torativity; (d) h igh s torativitY.

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o (b) (d) o Figure 8 .6 C omparison f d rawdown c onesa t a g iven t ime f or a quifers f ( ( t (a) ow t ransmissivity;b) h igh t ransmissivity;c) l ow s torativity; (d) h igh s torativitY.
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Mich Tech - GE - 3850
Plonr=O( =@S c c li o n Drowdown h=ho h ( r , f)t=O f=tPotenliometricurfoce sPiezometer ' i : -. .: . : . " . ' . : ' : .C o nifn e d :' o quifer ] :.'. r .:.'.'.'.t:.".'l'.1 At6 H y d r o u l ih e o d n t o u r s c
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CompSci 6 Programming Design and Analysishttp:/www.cs.duke.edu/courses/spring09/cps006ProfessorRobertC.Duvallhttp:/www.cs.duke.edu/~rcdCompSci6What is Computer Science?Whatisitthatdistinguishesitfromtheseparate subjectswithwhichitisrelated?Wh
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%!PS-Adobe-2.0 %Creator: dvips(k) 5.95a Copyright 2005 Radical Eye Software %Title: revision.dvi %Pages: 2 %PageOrder: Ascend %BoundingBox: 0 0 595 842 %DocumentFonts: CMR12 CMBX12 CMSS12 CMTI12 CMMI12 CMSY10 %DocumentPaperSizes: a4 %EndComments %DVI
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Youngstown - CHEM - 3719
Chemistry 3719R, Organic Chemistry I, Department of Chemistry, Youngstown State University CHEM 3719R Spring Semester 2009 Instructors Office Hours Text Book Course Code 21324 - T 6:35 7:25 PM, Ward Beecher Hall, Room 6030 Course Code 21325 Th 6:
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
MATH 159 - StatisticsHomework AssignmentsSection Problem Numbers 1-2 1-4 2-3 3-2 3-4 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 27 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23 5, 8, 11, 13 5, 7, 9, 13, 17, 23, 25, 27, 31 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 27 Section Problem Numbers 1
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08Practice Quiz 10 Math 159Show all work (except for Excel work, as specified in each question) 1. (4 pts) A Statistics instructor is interested in the effects of studying Statistics. He takes a sample of 12 Statistics students and me
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08Practice Quiz 9 Math 159Show all work 1. (6 pts) A university financial aid office was studying the summer employment of its students. They found that, out of a sample of 350 men, 84 were not employed during the summer. Out of 250 w
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08 Show all workPractice Quiz 8 Math 1591. A random sample of 18 Statuski birds had a mean weight of 9.52 pounds and a standard deviation of 1.07 pounds. Assume weights of Statuski birds are normally distributed. a. (4 pts) Find a 90%
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08 Show all workPractice Quiz 7 Math 1591. In a random sample of 120 cars in California, 45 are in violation of the state's mandatory antismog law. a. (4 pts) Find a 92% confidence interval for the proportion of cars in the state in v
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Assign v1 x 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Total: Assign v2 x 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Total: Assign v3 x 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Total: Assign v4 x 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Total:P(x) 0.02 0.05 0.08 0.12 0.06 0.17 0.16 0.08 0.2 0.07x*P(x) 0.02 0.09 0.24 0.46 0.31 1.
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08 Show all workPractice Quiz 6 Math 1591. (4 pts) Monicas bookstore has 12000 books in it, and 8400 of these are nonfiction. You randomly select 11 books from this bookstore, with replacement. What is the probability that you select
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08 Show all work 1. Rob has a jar with 36 marbles in it, as described in the following table. Round all final answers to three significant digits. Striped Dotted Red 12 2 Yellow 4 5 Green 3 10Practice Quiz 5 Math 159a. (1 pt) You rand
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08 Show all workPractice Quiz 4 Math 1591. Rob has designed a quiz that has two multiple-choice questions, each question having three choices (A, B, and C). One of Robs students has decided to guess randomly at each question (i.e., ea
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08Computer Assignment #1 Math 159For all three graphs in this assignment, choose one of the following options: I have printed the graphs and stapled the page(s) to this sheet. I emailed the Excel file to rsmedfjeld@ohlone.edu on thi
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Sample Ages 67 39 29 39 21 35 34 37 31 28 31 44 25 29 38 43 58 43 34 36 38 27 40 41 56 30 33 40 41 25 12 43 16 37 27 36 35 32 25 38 41 29 54 45 32 40 22 37 36 40 4832 45 38 12 31 22 36 31 24 43 19 20 26 48 36 34 31 21 33 29 31 22 51 43 33 36 13 53
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08 Show all work - For any non-exact values, round to two decimal placesPractice Quiz 3 Math 1591. (3 pts each) Find the mean, median, mode, and midrange for each sample. a. 89 70 56 78 92 89 81 68 mean = _ median = _ mode = _ midrang
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08 The following exam grades were recorded for 40 students:Practice Quiz 2 Math 15939 54 62 63 67 68 70 70 71 72 74 76 76 77 78 78 79 80 81 81 83 83 84 85 85 86 87 87 88 89 89 90 90 92 94 97 98 98 100 100 1. (6 pts) Construct a freque
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08Practice Quiz 1 Math 1591. (2 pts) Consider the following situation: You ask each person in your study how many coins they have in their pocket. a. What type of variable is that? Check all correct answers: qualitative quantitative
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Final ExamTopics:Math 159 Monday, 12/15/08 12:00-2:00PM11 problems worth 106 pts total - highest grade possible is 100 find the mean and standard deviation for a sample calculate probabilities for given situations (3) find a confidence
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Exam 4 - Chap 9 & 108 problems worth 105 pts total - highest grade possible is 100 find confidence intervals for two populations (2) do hypothesis tests for two populations (3)Math 159 Friday, 12/5/08 find the correlation coefficient an
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Exam 3 - Chap 7 & 811 problems worth 106 pts total - highest grade possible is 100 find confidence intervals (4)Math 159 Friday, 11/14/08 find the minimum sample size for a given margin of error (1) find p-value for a given hypothesis t
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Math 159 Handout8-3 Testing a Claim About a ProportionMore Chapter 8 ExamplesEx 1. A drug company reports that no more than 8% of people who use their Fixitall drug have negative side effects. An impartial agency took a sample of 160 Fixitall us
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Math 159 Handout7-2 Estimating a Population Proportion Ex 1. Find z/2 for 96% confidence.Chapter 7 ExamplesEx 2. Out of a sample of 400 students, 150 were unsatisfied with their education. Find a 96% confidence interval for the proportion of stu
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _Math 159 Exam 2 - Chap 4, 5, & 611 problems (6 with multiple parts) worth 105 pts total - highest grade possible is 100 find probabilities in symbols/formulas (18 points) use the binomial formula (7 points) work with standard normal dist
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Math 159 Handout6-2 Standard Normal DistributionChapter 6 ExamplesEx 1. Suppose a is a positive number such that the area under the standard normal curve to the left z = a is 0.7. Find the probabilities represented by each of the given graphs. a
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Math 159 Handout5-2 Random VariablesChapter 5 ExamplesEx 1. Rob has 4 cards: a jack, a queen, a king, and an ace. Two students each randomly pick a card, with replacement. List a random variable associated with this and identify the correspondin
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _Math 159 Exam 1 - Chap 1, 2, & 311 questions worth 105 pts total - highest grade possible is 100 identify the type of variable and measurement scale for a given variable identify the type of sampling in a study analyze a study with criti
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Math 159 Handout4-2 Fundamentals Definitions:Chapter 4 Definitions/Examples1. experiment process of making observations or measurements these result in outcomes 2. sample space the set of all possible outcomes for a particular experiment 3. e
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Math 159 Handout3-2 Measures of CenterChapter 3 ExamplesEx 1. If a course has two midterms that count for 30% each and a final that counts for 40%, find the course grade for someone with the following grades: midterms: 75, 84 final exam: 63Ex
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Math 159 Handout1-1 OverviewChapter 1 Definitions population the collection of all objects (or people) of interest in a particular study sample the part of the population used in the study (could be the entire population) data the collectio
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
A 7.3 6.4 7 6.5 7 7.2 6.9 0.14B 7.1 6.2 7 6.4 6.8 6.7 6.7 0.12C 5.6 6.3 6 5.7 6.2 5 5.8 x_bar 0.23 s^2 x_bar_bar = 6.47x_bar_bar =6.47A 7.3 6.4 7 6.5 7 7.2 Anova: Single Factor SUMMARY Groups Column 1 Column 2 Column 3B 7.1 6.2 7 6.4 6.8
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Time Period Year 1: Jan/Feb Year 1: March/Apr Year 1: May/June Year 1: July/Aug Year 1: Sept/Oct Year 1: Nov/Dec Year 2: Jan/Feb Year 2: March/Apr Year 2: May/June Year 2: July/Aug Year 2: Sept/Oct Year 2: Nov/Dec Year 3: Jan/Feb Year 3: March/Apr Ye
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Ex 1a F_test two-tailed test p-value = F_crit =2.56 0.0636 greater than alpha 2.70271b right-tailed test p-value = 0.0318 less than alpha F_crit = 2.3002 Ex 2 F_test = 1.88 right-tailed test p-value = 0.0223 less than alpha F_crit = 1.6760Orang
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Date Sept. 1 Sept. 2 Sept. 3 Sept. 4 Sept. 5 Sept. 6 Sept. 7 Sept. 8 Sept. 9 Sept. 10 Sept. 11 Sept. 12 Sept. 13 Sept. 14 Sept. 15 Sept. 16 Sept. 17 Sept. 18 Sept. 19 Sept. 20 Sept. 21 Sept. 22 Sept. 23 Sept. 24 Sept. 25 Sept. 26 Sept. 27 Sept. 28 Se
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
MON 0 0 0 0 0.05 0 0.01 0 0 0.12 0 0 1.41 0 0 0 0.47 0 0 0.92 0.01 0.01 0 0 0 0 0.03 0 0.01 0 0.11 0.01 0.49 0 0.01 0 0 0 0.12 0 0 0 0.59 0 0.01 0 0 0.41 0 0 0TUES 0 0 0 0.44 0 0 0 0 0.01 0.06 0 0.02 0.65 0 0 0 0 0.09 0.14 0.36 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.11 0
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Ex 1 Right-tailed n= s= alpha = chitest = p-value = chi_crit =81 sigma = 1.28 df = 0.05 108.32 0.02 101.881.1 80Ex 2 Left-tailed n= s= alpha = sigma_sq = df = chi_test = p-value = chi_crit =20 2.5 0.05 10 19 11.88 0.11 10.12Ex 3 Two-tailed
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Ex 1. x_bar = s= n= mu =289 56 16 250alpha =0.01t_test =2.79Ex 2. Two-tailed test p-value = 0.0139 t_crit = 2.95Right-tailed test p-value = 0.01 t_crit = 2.6Ex 3. x_bar = s= n= df = mu = alpha = t_test = Left-tailed test p-value = t_c
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Blue 0.881 0.863 0.775 0.854 0.810 0.858 0.818 0.868 0.803 0.932 0.842 0.832 0.807 0.841 0.932 0.833 0.881 0.818 0.864 0.825 0.855 0.942 0.825 0.869 0.912 0.887 0.886n= s= conf = alpha = alpha/2 = area =27 0.04 0.98 0.02 0.01 0.99 chisqL = chisqR
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Red 0.751 0.841 0.856 0.799 0.966 0.859 0.857 0.942 0.873 0.809 0.890 0.878 0.905x_bar = s= n= confidence = alpha = df = t= E=0.864 0.06 13 0.94 0.06 12 2.08 0.030.8304 < mu <0.8967
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Red 0.751 0.841 0.856 0.799 0.966 0.859 0.857 0.942 0.873 0.809 0.890 0.878 0.905Orange 0.735 0.895 0.865 0.864 0.852 0.866 0.859 0.838 0.863 0.888 0.925 0.793 0.977 0.850 0.830 0.856 0.842 0.778 0.786 0.853 0.864 0.873 0.880 0.882 0.931Yellow 0.
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08Computer Assignment #2 Math 159Make sure that you use the correct Excel document for this assignment. You will not receive credit if you use the wrong data. 1. (20 pts) Let x be a random variable with the probability distribution gi
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08Computer Assignment #3 Math 159Do ALL calculations in Excel, and email your completed Excel document to rsmedfjeld@ohlone.edu by the beginning of class on Monday November 10th. 1. (10 pts) When there is a large number of trials in a
Ohlone - PEOPLE - 159
Name _ Fall 08Computer Assignment #4 Math 159Do ALL calculations in Excel, and email your completed Excel document to rsmedfjeld@ohlone.edu by the beginning of class on Wednesday November 26th. 1. (25 pts) For all parts of this problem, use the s
UCSB - ECON - 100
Chapter OneThe MarketThe Theory of Economics does not furnish a body of settled conclusions immediately applicable to policy. It is a method rather than a doctrine, an apparatus of the mind, a technique of thinking which helps its possessor to dra
UCSB - ECON - 100
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UCSB - ECON - 100
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