The population of lions was noted in different regions across the world in the following table:
| Number of lions | Number of regions |
|---|---|
| 0–100 | 2 |
| 100–200 | 5 |
| 200–300 | 9 |
| 300–400 | 12 |
| 400–500 | x |
| 500–600 | 20 |
| 600–700 | 15 |
| 700–800 | 10 |
| 800–900 | y |
| 900–1000 | 2 |
| Total | 100 |
If the median of the given data is 525, find the values of x and y.
Given Data:
| Number of lions | Number of regions (Frequency \(f\)) |
|---|---|
| 0–100 | 2 |
| 100–200 | 5 |
| 200–300 | 9 |
| 300–400 | 12 |
| 400–500 | x |
| 500–600 | 20 |
| 600–700 | 15 |
| 700–800 | 10 |
| 800–900 | y |
| 900–1000 | 2 |
| Total | 100 |
Median = 525
Total frequency \(n = 100\)
Median class is the class where cumulative frequency just exceeds \(\frac{n}{2} = 50\).
Step 1: Express \(y\) in terms of \(x\) using total frequency
Sum of frequencies = 100, so:
\[ 2 + 5 + 9 + 12 + x + 20 + 15 + 10 + y + 2 = 100 \] \[ 75 + x + y = 100 \Rightarrow x + y = 25 \quad ...(1) \]
Step 2: Find cumulative frequency up to each class
| Class | Frequency (f) | Cumulative Frequency (CF) |
|---|---|---|
| 0–100 | 2 | 2 |
| 100–200 | 5 | 7 |
| 200–300 | 9 | 16 |
| 300–400 | 12 | 28 |
| 400–500 | \(x\) | \(28 + x\) |
| 500–600 | 20 | \(48 + x\) |
| 600–700 | 15 | \(63 + x\) |
| 700–800 | 10 | \(73 + x\) |
| 800–900 | \(y\) | \(73 + x + y\) |
| 900–1000 | 2 | \(75 + x + y = 100\) |
Step 3: Identify median class
Median lies in the class where cumulative frequency \(\geq 50\). From above:
- CF up to 500–600 class = \(48 + x\)
- CF up to 600–700 class = \(63 + x\)
Since \(48 + x < 50 \leq 63 + x\), median class is 600–700.
Step 4: Use median formula
\[ \text{Median} = l + \left( \frac{\frac{n}{2} - F}{f_m} \right) \times h \] Where:
- \(l = 600\) (lower limit of median class)
- \(n = 100\)
- \(F = 48 + x\) (CF before median class)
- \(f_m = 15\) (frequency of median class)
- \(h = 100\) (class width)
- Median = 525
Substitute values:
\[ 525 = 600 + \left( \frac{50 - (48 + x)}{15} \right) \times 100 \] \[ 525 - 600 = \frac{50 - 48 - x}{15} \times 100 \] \[ -75 = \frac{2 - x}{15} \times 100 \] \[ -75 = \frac{100(2 - x)}{15} \] Multiply both sides by 15: \[ -75 \times 15 = 100(2 - x) \] \[ -1125 = 200 - 100x \] \[ -1125 - 200 = -100x \] \[ -1325 = -100x \] \[ x = \frac{1325}{100} = 13.25 \] Since this is not an integer, check median class again:
Re-evaluate median class with median = 525, which lies in 500–600 interval
Use median class 500–600:
- \(l = 500\)
- \(f_m = 20\)
- \(F = 28 + x\)
Using median formula:
\[ 525 = 500 + \left( \frac{50 - (28 + x)}{20} \right) \times 100 \] \[ 25 = \frac{22 - x}{20} \times 100 \] \[ 25 = 5 (22 - x) \] \[ 25 = 110 - 5x \] \[ 5x = 110 - 25 = 85 \] \[ x = 17 \]
Step 5: Find \(y\) using \(x + y = 25\)
\[ 17 + y = 25 \Rightarrow y = 8 \]
Final Answer:
\[ x = 17, \quad y = 8 \]
The distribution below gives the weights of 30 students of a class. Find the median weight of the students.
| Weight (in kg) | 40 - 45 | 45 - 50 | 50 - 55 | 65 - 60 | 70- 65 | 65 - 70 | 70 - 75 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of students | 2 | 3 | 8 | 6 | 6 | 3 | 2 |
100 surnames were randomly picked up from a local telephone directory and the frequency distribution of the number of letters in the English alphabets in the surnames was obtained as follows:
Number of letters | 1 - 4 | 4 - 7 | 7 - 10 | 10 - 13 | 13 - 16 | 16 - 19 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of surnames | 6 | 30 | 40 | 16 | 4 | 4 |
Determine the median number of letters in the surnames. Find the mean number of letters in the surnames? Also, find the modal size of the surnames.
The following table gives the distribution of the life time of 400 neon lamps :
| Life time (in hours) | Number of lamps |
|---|---|
1500 - 2000 | 14 |
2000 - 2500 | 56 |
2500 - 3000 | 60 |
3000 - 3500 | 86 |
3500 - 4000 | 74 |
4000 - 4500 | 62 |
4500 - 5000 | 48 |
Find the median life time of a lamp.
The lengths of 40 leaves of a plant are measured correct to the nearest millimetre, and the data obtained is represented in the following table :
Length (in mm) | Number of leaves |
|---|---|
118 - 126 | 3 |
127 - 135 | 5 |
136 - 144 | 9 |
145 - 153 | 12 |
154 - 162 | 5 |
163 - 171 | 4 |
172 - 180 | 2 |
Find the median length of the leaves.
(Hint : The data needs to be converted to continuous classes for finding the median, since the formula assumes continuous classes. The classes then change to 117.5 - 126.5, 126.5 - 135.5, . . ., 171.5 - 180.5.)
A life insurance agent found the following data for distribution of ages of 100 policy holders. Calculate the median age, if policies are given only to persons having age 18 years onwards but less than 60 year.
Age (in years) | Number of policy holders |
|---|---|
Below 20 | 2 |
Below 25 | 6 |
Below 30 | 24 |
Below 35 | 45 |
Below 40 | 78 |
Below 45 | 89 |
Below 50 | 92 |
Below 55 | 98 |
Below 60 | 100 |
| Case No. | Lens | Focal Length | Object Distance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | \(A\) | 50 cm | 25 cm |
| 2 | B | 20 cm | 60 cm |
| 3 | C | 15 cm | 30 cm |