Persons having Raynaud's syndrome are apt to suffer a sudden impairment of blood circulation in fingers and toes. In an experiment to study the extent of this impairment, each subject immersed a forefinger in water and the resulting heat output (cal/cm2/min) was measured. For m = 9 subjects with the syndrome, the average heat output was x = 0.63, and for n = 9 nonsufferers, the average output was 2.09. Let μ1 and μ2 denote the true average heat outputs for the sufferers and nonsufferers, respectively. Assume that the two distributions of heat output are normal with σ1 = 0.3 and σ2 = 0.5.

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Answer:

There is enough evidence to say that the true average heat output of persons with the syndrmoe differs from the true average heat output of non-sufferers.

Step-by-step explanation:

We have to perform a hypothesis test on the difference between means.

The null and alternative hypothesis are:

[tex]H_0: \mu_1-\mu_2=0\\\\H_a: \mu_1-\mu_2<0[/tex]

μ1: mean heat output for subjects with the syndrome.

μ2: mean heat output for non-sufferers.

We will use a significance level of 0.05.

The difference between sample means is:

[tex]M_d=\bar x_1-\bar x_2=0.63-2.09=-1.46[/tex]

The standard error is

[tex]s_{M_d}=\sqrt{\sigma_1^2/n_1+\sigma_2^2/n_2}=\sqrt{0.3^2/9+0.5^2/9}=\sqrt{ 0.038 } \\\\ s_{M_d}=0.194[/tex]

The t-statistic is

[tex]t=\dfrac{M_d}{s_{M_d}}=\dfrac{-1.46}{0.194}=-7.52[/tex]

The degrees of freedom are

[tex]df=n_1+n_2-2=9+9-2=16[/tex]

The critical value for a left tailed test at a significance level of 0.05 and 16 degrees of freedom is t=-1.746.

The t-statistic is below the critical value, so it lies in the rejection region.

The null hypothesis is rejected.

There is enough evidence to say that the true average heat output of persons with the syndrmoe differs from the true average heat output of non-sufferers.