Concept explainers
(a)
Probability of observing exactly 50 counts in 1min.
(a)
Answer to Problem 9.13P
Probability of observing exactly 50 counts in 1-min is 0.056.
Explanation of Solution
Given:
True mean counting rate is 50 cpm
Mean counts in 1-min,
Exact counts,
Formula used:
Standard deviation,
Probability in normal distribution,
Calculation:
Standard deviation,
Probability for exactly 50 counts
Conclusion:
Probabilityof observing exactly 50 count is 0.056.
(b)
Probability of measuring between 47-57 counts in 1 min.
(b)
Answer to Problem 9.13P
Probability of measuring between 47-57 cpm is 0.68
Explanation of Solution
Given:
Mean counts,
Measuring lie between,
Formula used:
Standard deviation,
Z-score of normal distribution table,
Calculation:
Standard deviation,
Z-score for n = 43,
Z-score for n = 57,
Using Z-score table of normal distribution
Probability of measuring counts between 47-57 cpm
Conclusion:
Probability of measuring between 47-57 cpm is 0.68.
(c)
Probability of measuring more than 57 counts in 1min.
(c)
Answer to Problem 9.13P
Probability of measuring more than 57 counts in 1-min is 0.16.
Explanation of Solution
Given:
True mean counting rate,
Exact count rate n liesbetween,
Formula used:
Standard deviation,
Z-score of normal distribution table,
Calculation:
Standard deviation,
Z-score for n = 43,
Using the Z-score table of normal distribution
The probability of measuring more than 57 counts in 1min.
Conclusion:
Probability of measuring more than 57 counts in 1-min is 0.16.
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 9 Solutions
Introduction To Health Physics
- A laboratory blood test is 99% effective in detecting a certain disease, when it is in fact present. However, the test also yields a false positive result for 0.5% of the healthy person tested (that is, if a healthy person is tested, then, with probability 0.005, the test will imply he has the disease). If 0.1 percent of the population actually has the disease, what is the probability that a person has the disease given that his test result is positive?arrow_forwardThe rate of a simple enzyme reaction is given by the standard Michaelis–Menten equation: rate = Vmax [s]/([s] + KM) if the Vmax of an enzyme is 100 μmole/sec and the KM is 1 mM, at what substrate concentration is the rate 50 μmole/sec? Plot a graph of rate versus substrate (s) concentration for [s] = 0 to 10 mM. Convert this to a plot of 1/rate versus 1/[s]. Why is the latter plot a straight line?arrow_forwardResults for a 1997 survey of about 25,000 each male and female nonfarm wage and salary workers were published in the Monthly Labor Review in 1998. Hours worked in the week prior to the survey were found to have mean and standard deviation 42.66 and 12.46 for the men, 36.90 and 11.93 for the women. The test statistic turns out to be larger in absolute value for the women than it is for the men. Is this because the women’s sample mean 36.90 is further from 40 than 42.66 is, or because the women’s standard deviation 11.93 is smaller than the men’s, or both of these, or neither of these?arrow_forward
- Based on a survey of a random sample of 900 adults in the United States, a journalist reports that 60 perc adults in the United States are in favor of increasing the minimum hourly wage. If the reported percent ha margin of error of 2.7 percentage points, which of the following is closest to the level of confidence?arrow_forwardThe recommended adult dose of Elixophillin, a drug used to treat asthma, is 6mg/kg of body mass. Calculate the dose in milligrams for a 150lb person.arrow_forwardA patient is diagnosed to have Po cancer cells at time t = 0 and these cells grow subsequently according to P = −aP(M – P) where P(t) is the number of the cells at time t while a and M are two given positive constants. The patient will die when the number of bugs approaches infinity. Consider the case Po > M for the prognosis of the patient, i.e., find the time the patient has left to live.arrow_forward
- Find the minimum sample size n needed to estimate μ for the given values of c, σ, and E. c=0.90, σ=7.4, and E=2 Assume that a preliminary sample has at least 30 members. n=enter your response here (Round up to the nearest whole number.)arrow_forwardA radiographic technique calls for 46 kVp and 28 mAs which results in an exposure of 278 µGy. What is the expected exposure if the technique is changed to 75 kVp and 14 mAs? Round your answer to the nearest whole number. Do not include units.arrow_forwardSoon after taking an aspirin, a patient has absorbed 300 milligrams of the drug. If the amount of aspirin in the bloodstream decays exponentially, with half being removed every 2 hours, find, to the nearest 0.1 hour, the time it will take for the amount of aspirin in the bloodstream to decrease to 100 milligrams. hrarrow_forward
- (a) what is the average rate of change of the number of bacteria in the culture between 1 and 3 hours after the measurements begin? (b) because the average rate of science is _ the bacterial population is decreasing at an average rate of _ bacteria per hour between one and three hours after management begins?arrow_forwardThe volume of air we breathe in is about 10% of lung capacity perbreath. If the level of PM2.5 is constant at 40 μg/m3 over the wholeyear, how many grams of dust would you inhale in total in one year,assuming that the dust particles in every breath are all collected inyour lung?arrow_forwardthe V•O2max of people tends to declineafter age 30 by about 9% per decade for sedentary individuals,but it declines less than 5% per decade for people who stay active.The average V•O2max in healthy 30-year-olds is about 3.1 L/min.Using the information given here, what would the average V•O2maxbe in 60-year-olds who have been sedentary throughout theirlives and in 60-year-olds who have stayed active (keep in mindthat the decline is exponential)?arrow_forward
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningUniversity Physics (14th Edition)PhysicsISBN:9780133969290Author:Hugh D. Young, Roger A. FreedmanPublisher:PEARSONIntroduction To Quantum MechanicsPhysicsISBN:9781107189638Author:Griffiths, David J., Schroeter, Darrell F.Publisher:Cambridge University Press
- Physics for Scientists and EngineersPhysicsISBN:9781337553278Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningLecture- Tutorials for Introductory AstronomyPhysicsISBN:9780321820464Author:Edward E. Prather, Tim P. Slater, Jeff P. Adams, Gina BrissendenPublisher:Addison-WesleyCollege Physics: A Strategic Approach (4th Editio...PhysicsISBN:9780134609034Author:Randall D. Knight (Professor Emeritus), Brian Jones, Stuart FieldPublisher:PEARSON