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Suppose the force acting on a column that helps to support a building is a normally distributed random variable X with mean value 15.0 and standard deviation 1.25. Compute the following probabilities by standardizing and then using Table A.3.
(a). $P(X \leq 15)$:
Since the mean $\mu = 15$, then probability of being below that is $0.5$. Standardizing, we have that
$Z = \dfrac{X-\mu}{\sigma}$ and $P(X \leq a) = P(\dfrac{a - \mu}{\sigma})$,
yielding, by subtracting $\mu$ a shift of $\mu \rightarrow 0$,
and by dividing by $\sigma$, scaling std deviation to $1$ instead of $\sigma$,
$\Rightarrow P(\dfrac{-1}{1.25} \leq Z \geq \dfrac{3}{1.25})$
$\Rightarrow P(-0.8 \leq Z \geq 2.4)$, because $z = \dfrac{X - \mu}{\sigma}$, as above.
Hence we are "standardizing" this variable. Then,
$\Rightarrow \phi(2.4) - \phi(-0.8)$ due to the axioms.
Now, since we see $\phi$ that means we use the probability distribution tables.
So, in the Table for Standard Normal Curve areas, lookup $z = -0.8$, and for decimal $.00$,
that value is $.2119$. Similarly, lookup $z = 2.4$, and for decimal $.00$ that value is
$.9918$. Thus,