Your Questions About Recycling
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Filed under Recycling Q & A
Lisa asks…
Need help ASAP, senior project!!! Where can i find how much plastic is recycled per year?
I need to find some statistics on how much post-consumer plastic waste is actually recycled per year, maybe dating back to 1990? thanks i need this asap, its for my senior project due tomorrow, it determines if i graduate or not. thanks!!
The Expert answers:
_The quantity of post-consumer plastics recycled has increased every year since at least 1990. In 2006 the amount of plastic bottles recycled reached a record high of 2,220,000,000 pounds.
_The amount of PET bottles recycled in 2006 increased more than 102 million pounds compared to 2005.
HDPE bottle recycling increased in 2005 to 928 million pounds.
_All plastic bottles were recycled at a rate of 24 percent in 2005.
*Hope This Helps*
Mandy asks…
Statistics for trash dumping, liter etc.?
I’m making a video and need the statistics for like how much litter is thrown on the streets and how much of it is recycled and stuff like that
The Expert answers:
For every piece of litter dropped, seven little baby kittens are slaughtered mercilessly.
DONT LITTER!!!!!!!!
James asks…
Statistics questions?
Wording Bias: Comment on each of the following as a potential sample survey question. Is the question clear? I sit slanted toward a desired response?
a)”some cell phone users have developed brain cancer. Should all cell phones come witha warning label explaining the danger of using cell phones?”
b)”Do you agree that a national system of health insurance should be favored because it would provide health insurancee for everyone and would reduce adminstrative costs?”
c)”In view of escalating enviornmental degradation and incipient resource depletion, would you favor economic incentives for recycling of resource-intensive consumer goods?
The Regan-Carter Election Debate:
Some television stations take quick polls of public opinion by announcing a questin on the air and asking viewers to call one of two telephone numbers to register their opion as “yes” or “No.” Telephone companies make available “900”numbers for htis purpose. Dialing a 900 number r
The Expert answers:
A) I put this statement with statements such as:
“Some people who breathe develop lung cancer”
well, cell phone use could be linked to brain cancer but at this point so many people use cell phones that it would not be possible to isolate the use of cell phones as primary factor in brain cancer
b) the problem with this statement is that it gives information and pushes the answerer in one direction. By saying no to this question you are saying that you disagree with the possible benefits but does not address any of disadvantaged of a national health insurance program. The question should only be “do you support or not support a national system of health insurance” and then allow for the answerer to explain.
C) similar to part b. The first part of the statement pushes the answerer to say yes. Otherwise they are saying that they don’t care about the environment… The actual question, support of economic incentives for recycling is a secondary issue.
For the tv question…
Http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AqPvlc5nQ4Yaux5IfHWHqgLsy6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20071220203920AA5E8KU
Robert asks…
Statistics homework help please….?
A random sample of 500 households was indentified in a major North American city using the municipal voter registration list. Five hundred questionnaires went out, directed at one adult in each household, which asked a series of questions about attitudes regarding the municipal recycling program. Eighty of the 500 surveys were filled out and returned to the researchers.
a) can the 80 households that returned questionnaires be regarded as a random sample of househoulds? why?
b) what type of bias might affect the survey outcome?
The Expert answers:
A) Not really because then it’s more of a convenience sample. You only get an idea of those who take the time and effort to mail it in. You don’t know anything about the people who didn’t. It’s not random enough.
B) Probably only those who have strong feelings about the recycling program will both to send it back in. Those who don’t really care or haven’t really thought about it probably won’t respond.
Charles asks…
statistics help!!! PLEASE?
Each month,an American household generates an average of 28 pounds of newspaper for garbage or recycling .Assume the standard deviation is 2pounds.If a household is selected at random,the probability of generating between 27 and 31 pounds per month is——————-(Answer should be rounded to the nearest ten thousandth-four numbers after the decimal point Answer should be written in decimal , not in percentage)
The Expert answers:
Assume that the households trash generation is normally distributed.
Standardize all values so that you can compare them to a standard normal curve by subtracting the mean and dividing by the standard deviation.
E.g. If X is the variable representing trash generation, it is distributed Normal with a mean of 28 and a standard deviation of 2. X ~ N(28,2).
To standardize it we write (X – 28) / 2 = Z is distributed Normal with mean 0 and standard deviation 1.
We need to find the probability that X lies between (27,31) or the probability that Z lies between ( (27-28)/2, (31-28)/2) = (-1/2 , 3/2).
Notice that you have to standardize the interval by subtracting the mean and dividing by the standard deviation.
To get the probability that Z is in the interval (-1/2, 3/2) you need to look up the Normal CDF chart in your book, or Z table. The probability is the area under the Z curve (or normal (0,1) curve) between -1/2 and 3/2.
You can compute the values using an online applet like the one found here: http://www.uvm.edu/~dhowell/StatPages/More_Stuff/normalcdf.html
There is .3085 area to the left of -1/2 and an area of .9332 to the left of 3/2. That means there is an area of (.9332 – .3085) = .6247 between the values. Thus the probability that a random household is in the interval is .6247.
Mark asks…
Statistics: Probability Questions?
I have a questions from my Review booklet that i dont know how they got the answer so if you could explain how to get to the answer…
(Q1)
You flip an UNfair coin 2 times. the probability that you get heads both times is 0.36
What is the probability that you get tails both times?
..Answer : 0.16
(Q2)
A recycling plant compresses cans into bales. The weights of the bales are known to follow a normal distribution with standard deviation of 8 pounds. in a random sample of 64 bales, what is the probabilty that the sample mean differs from the population mean by no more than 1 pound?
… Answer : 0.6826
(Q3)
Bottles of apple juice are filled by a machine. Fill volumes are normally distributed with a mean of (u) and standard deviation of 1.46ml. The label on the bottles say that they contain 500ml of juice. What value should (u) be set at so that only 2% of bottles will be underfilled?
…Answer : 503 ml
The Expert answers:
Since P(HH) = 0.36, P(H) = 0.6, P(T) = 0.4, P(TT) = 0.4^2 = 0.16
Lizzie asks…
Statistics Help Please?
Can someone please answer there 3 questions for me?
Q1. The probability that a container holds more than 500mL of use is 0.2. If a batch of 10 of these containers is tested, what is the probability that:
(a) At least half of them will contain more than 500mL?
(b) None of them will contain more than 500mL?
Q2.Plastic buckets are made by machine on a production line. The weight of each bucket is normally distributed with mean 1250g and standard deviation 120g. Let X be the weight of a bucket in a randomly chosen batch.
(a) Find Pr(X > 1250)
(b) Find Pr(1250 < X < 1380)
(c) Find Pr(1135 < X < 1275)
(d) Buckets weighing less than 1180g are regarded as underweight and need to be thrown out for recycling. What proportion of buckets are underweight when they come off the production line?
Q3.Amy thinks that all brands of chocolate taste the same. She decides to test four brands by having 20 people test them and state their preference. Her results are shown below.
Brand:CadburyNestleHersheysPams
Prefered by: 8 4 5 3
(a) Copy and complete the table to show the expected frequencies in this problem.
(b) Perform the x2 test to see whether there appears to be any significant preference for one brand of chocolate over another.
The Expert answers:
Q1 (a) ANSWER: PROBABILITY At least half (5 or more) = 3% which is the same as saying 97% of 4 or less.
Why???
BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION, POPULATION PROPORTION
n = NUMBER OF TRIALS [ 10]
(sample size)
k = NUMBER OF SUCCESSES [4]
(from 0 up to and including k NUMBER OF SUCCESSES)
p = POPULATION PROPORTION [20%]
COMPUTATION OF BINOMIAL PROPORTION:
P(k ? 4) = n!/[k!*(n – k)!] * p^k * (1 – p)^(n – k)= 0.97
Carol asks…
I am doing presentations on saving the earth. Do you have any statistics or other ideas for me?
I am searching for new ideas. I need facts and figures that 4 – 9 year olds will easily understand. I am planning on covering the reduce, reuse, recycle portion and ways they can be more eco-friendly. I was also thinking about doing a project with them that would be an example of recycling and reusing. I was going to do making paper or paper mache but I need to find projects that are a little less messy and less time consuming. I only have half an hour to work with them!
The Expert answers:
Well, you can obviously recycle! You can also start riding a bike or something everywhere instead of a car or truck. You can have the 4-9 yr olds to tell there parents to do that (no car). I think that the 9-4 yr olds will enjoy a contest to help save the animals like becomeing a vegitarian for a couple of days or so and whoever does it the longest wins! Hope the ideas work and i hope you help save our planet.
Daniel asks…
Can ANY paper be recycled?
I feel guilty throwing away old lecture notes. Xerox paper and notebook paper…can these be recycled?
The Expert answers:
Paper recycling is the process of recovering waste paper and remaking it into new paper products. There are three categories of paper that can be used as feedstocks for making recycled paper: mill broke, pre-consumer waste, and post-consumer waste.[1] Mill broke is paper trimmings and other paper scrap from the manufacture of paper, and is recycled internally in a paper mill. Pre-consumer waste is material that was discarded before it was ready for consumer use. Post-consumer waste is material discarded after consumer use, including OMG (old magazines), OTD (old telephone directories), and RMP (residential mixed paper). Paper suitable for recycling is called “scrap paper”.
While there are differences depending on the specific type of paper being recycled (corrugated fiberboard, newspaper, mixed office waste), recycling processes include the following steps:
Pulping: Adding water and applying mechanical action to separate fibers from each other.
Screening: Using screens, with either slots or holes, to remove contaminants that are larger than pulp fibers.
Centrifugal cleaning: Spinning the pulp slurry in a cleaner causes materials that are more dense than pulp fibers to move outward and be rejected.
Flotation: Passing air bubbles through the pulp slurry, with a surfactant present, causes ink particles to collect with the foam on the surface. By removing contaminated foam, pulp is made brighter. This step is sometimes called deinking.
Kneading or dispersion: Mechanical action is applied to fragment contaminant particles.
Washing: Small particles are removed by passing water through the pulp.
Bleaching: If white paper is desired, bleaching uses peroxides or hydrosulfites to remove color from the pulp.
Papermaking: The clean (and/or bleached) fiber is made into a “new” paper product in the same way that virgin paper is made.
Dissolved air flotation: Process water is cleaned for reuse.
Waste disposal: The unusable material left over, mainly ink, plastics, filler and short fibers, is called sludge. The sludge is buried in a landfill, burned to create energy at the paper mill or used as a fertilizer by local farmers.
In the mid-19th century, there was an increased demand for books and writing material. Up to this time, paper manufacturers had used discarded linen rags for paper, but supply could not keep up with the increased demand. Books were bought at auctions for the purpose of recycling fiber content into new paper, at least in the United Kingdom, by the beginning of the 19th century.[28]
Internationally, about half of all recovered paper comes from converting losses (“pre-consumer” recycling), such as shavings and unsold periodicals; approximately one third comes from household or “post-consumer” waste.[29]
Some statistics on paper consumption:
The average per capita paper use in the USA in 2001 was 700 pounds (318 kg). The average per capita paper use worldwide was 110 pounds (50 kg).[30]
It is estimated that 95% of business information is still stored on paper. [Source: International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) Discussion Paper (IIED, London, September 1996)]
Although paper is traditionally identified with reading and writing, communications has now been replaced by packaging as the single largest category of paper use at 41% of all paper used. [Source: North American Factbook PPI, 1995. (Figures are for 1993)]
115 billion sheets of paper are used annually for personal computers [Source: Worldwatch Institute]. The average daily web user prints 28 pages daily [Source: Gartner group and HP]
Most corrugated fiberboard boxes have over 25% recycled fibers. Some are 100% recycled fiber
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