Final answer:
a. Determine if overall distance is normally distributed and if assumption of equal variances is justified. b. Perform a hypothesis test to determine if both brands have equal mean overall distance. c. Construct a 95% two-sided confidence interval on the mean difference in overall distance for the two brands. d. Calculate the power of the statistical test to detect a true difference in mean overall distance of 5 yards. e. Determine the sample size required to detect a true difference in mean overall distance of 3 yards with power of 0.75.
Step-by-step explanation:
a. To determine if the overall distance is approximately normally distributed, we can create a histogram of the data for each brand and check if the distribution looks approximately bell-shaped. We can also calculate the skewness and kurtosis values for each brand and compare them to the values of a normal distribution. To test if the assumption of equal variances is justified, we can perform an F-test by comparing the variances of the two brands.
b. To test the hypothesis that both brands have equal mean overall distance, we can perform a two-sample t-test. The null hypothesis states that the means are equal, and the alternative hypothesis states that the means are unequal. The p-value calculated from the t-test will indicate the strength of evidence against the null hypothesis.
c. To construct a 95% two-sided confidence interval (CI) on the mean difference in overall distance, we can calculate the mean difference between the two brands and then determine the margin of error using the appropriate t-value. The CI will provide a range within which we can be confident that the true mean difference lies.
d. The power of the statistical test in part (b) to detect a true difference in mean overall distance of 5 yards can be calculated by determining the probability of rejecting the null hypothesis when the true mean difference is 5 yards. This can be done by performing a power analysis using the assumed effect size, sample sizes, significance level, and the variability of the data.
e. To determine the sample size required to detect a true difference in mean overall distance of 3 yards with a power of approximately 0.75, we can perform a power analysis and calculate the required sample size based on the assumed effect size, significance level, power, and variability of the data.