Dora likes to explore. Recently, she explored southeast Australia where she found some very large trees known as Eucalyptus regnans or Mountain Ash. She wondered if they were taller, on average, than the coastal Douglas Firs of her native state of Oregon in the United States, which have an average height of 250 feet in old growth areas. Dora measured the heights of 15 Mountain Ash trees in southeast Australia and found an average height of these trees of 293 feet. Suppose s 25 feet. Assume the heights of the 15 trees in Dora's sample are representative of the heights of all Mountain Ash trees in southeast Australia. The t-statistic for this problem is 6.661. Based on this t-statistic, which of the following is true? Choose the correct answer below.
A. With a p-value of 0.999, there is sufficient evidence to accept the null hypothesis as true.
B. With a p-value less than 0.0001, there is not sufficient evidence to reject the null hypothesis and accept the alternative as true. y
C. With a p-value less than 0.0001, there is sufficient evidence to reject the null hypothesis and accept the alternative as true.
D. With a p-value less than 0.0001, there is not sufficient evidence to accept the null hypothesis as true. 0 E. With a p-value of 0.999, there is not sufficient evidence to reject the null hypothesis and accept the alternative as true.

Respuesta :

Answer:

C. With a p-value less than 0.0001, there is sufficient evidence to reject the null hypothesis and accept the alternative as true.

Step-by-step explanation:

She performed an hypothesis test with the sample of size n=15 that she takes. The t-statistic has a value of 6.661.

The degrees of freedom for this sample size are:

[tex]df=n-1=15-1=14[/tex]

The P-value for a statistic t=6.661 and 14 degrees of freedom is:

[tex]\text{P-value}=P(t>6.661)=0.00001[/tex]

With these P-value we know that the effect is significant and the null hypothesis is rejected. There is enough evidence to support the claim that the mean height of Mountain Ash trees is greater than the coastal Douglas Firs.