Please use the central limit
theorem.
Please use the central limit theorem. 9.14 A baseball player has a batting average of 0.328....
A professional baseball player has a batting average of 0.286, which is his probability of getting a hit in an official at-bat. Let X be the number of hits he gets in 10 official at-bats so that X is a binomial random variable with n = 10 and p = 0.286. Find P(X = 3), showing how to use the formula as part of your work.
A baseball player has a lifetime batting average of 0.303. If, in a season, this player has 220 "at bats", what is the probability he gets 85 or more hits? Probability of 85 or more hits =
A baseball player has a lifetime batting average of 0.223. If, in a season, this player has 270 "at bats", what is the probability he gets 49 or more hits? Probability of 49 or more hits = ?
If a baseball player's batting average is 0.340 or 34%, find the probability that the player will have a bad season and only score at most 60 hits in 200 times at bat?
A baseball player has a lifetime batting average of 0.318. If, in a season, this player has 330 "at bats", what is the probability he gets 124 or more hits? Probability of 124 or more hits = Show all work and equation breakdowns
4) A baseball player has a .300 batting average. Define H as the number of hits the batter gets in 4 at bats. a) What probability distribution does H follow? Give the name of the distribution and the value of its parameter(s) (2 points) b) Find the probability that the batter gets 3 hits in 4 at bats (1 point). c) Find the probability that the batter gets more than 1 hit in 4 at bats (1 point)
A baseball player, Mickey, who bats 310 (or .310) gets an average of 3.1 hits in ten at bats. We will assume that each time Mickey bats he has a 0.31 probability of getting a hit. This means Mickeys at bats are independent from one another. If we also assume Mickey bats 5 times during a game and that x= the number of hits that Mickey gets then the following probability mass function, p(x), and cumulative distribution function F(x) are...
A baseball player has a batting average (probability of getting on base per time at bat) of 0.215. Based on this: What is the probability that they will get on base more than 6 of the next 15 at bats?
A high school baseball player has a 0.285 batting average. In one game, he gets 5 at bats. What is the probability he will get at least 3 hits in the game?
A high school baseball player has a 0.201 batting average. In one game, he gets 9 at bats. What is the probability he will get at least 6 hits in the game?