In practice, though a population may have a 'true' value for thevariance, this is never know and the variance is always estimatedfrom a sample using the formula
Wecan use this to find a confidence interval for the unknownvariance
ofwhich
isan estimate.
We can do this using the fact that
the
distributionwith
degrees of freedom.
Denoting by
and
theupper and lower
pointsof the
distributionwith
degreesof freedom we have that
witha certainty of![]()
We can separate this into two inequalities:
![]()
![]()
We can combine these two into a single inequality
witha certainty of
Theconfidence interval is ![]()
Example: The standard deviation of a sample of 15 tomato plants is5.8 cm. Find a 95% confidence interval for the variance of the tomatoplant population.
The upper and lower 2.5% points of the %chi^2 distribution with(15-1)=14 degrees of freedom are 5.63 and 26.12 respectively. Theconfidence interval is
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