Random Variables: Mean and Standard Deviation

SportsLover
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Homework Statement


The same potato chip company reports that their bags of family sized chips each follows an approx. Normal distribution with a mean of 10.72 ounces and a standard deviation of 0.2 ounces. If the company wants to ship these chips into boxes that contain 6 bags, what would be the mean and standard deviation of the total weight of a box containing 6 bags of chips? The empty boxes have a mean weight of 10 ounces and a standard deviation of 0.05 ounces

Homework Equations


Mean is affected by adding and multiplying
Standard Deviation is only affected by multiplying

The Attempt at a Solution


Mean = 10 +6(10.72)=74.32
Standard Deviation is where I am lost. I thought just 6(.2) but the answer is .493
 
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The standard variation of the sum of two stochastic variables is not the sum of the standard variations. You neeed to look at the variance.
 
SportsLover said:

Homework Statement


The same potato chip company reports that their bags of family sized chips each follows an approx. Normal distribution with a mean of 10.72 ounces and a standard deviation of 0.2 ounces. If the company wants to ship these chips into boxes that contain 6 bags, what would be the mean and standard deviation of the total weight of a box containing 6 bags of chips? The empty boxes have a mean weight of 10 ounces and a standard deviation of 0.05 ounces

Homework Equations


Mean is affected by adding and multiplying
Standard Deviation is only affected by multiplying

The Attempt at a Solution


Mean = 10 +6(10.72)=74.32
Standard Deviation is where I am lost. I thought just 6(.2) but the answer is .493
$$\text{Standard deviation} = \sqrt{\text{Variance}}.$$
What is the variance of a sum of independent random variables?
 

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