The t-value measures the size of the difference relative to the variation in your sample data. Put another way, T is simply the calculated difference represented in units of standard error. The greater the magnitude of T, the greater the evidence against the null hypothesis.
Number of aircrafts = 2939.93 + 233.517 * (years since 1990).
The predicted number of aircrafts flying in 1992 (1922 does not make sense for this equation because it returns a negative number of aircrafts) is found by pluging in the years since 1990 to 1992 = 1992 -1990 = 2 =>
number of aircrats = 2939.93 + 233.517 * (2) = 3406.96.
That is the predicted number.
The actual number is on the graph. You just go to the explanatory value 2 (years since 1990) on the horizontal axis, move straight upward until you reach the corresponding point on the graph, and read its vertical coordinate (go horizontally to the left until the vertical axis)
Answer:
Graph W only. But be careful it is not directly proporotional.
2x^2 = 28 - x in standard form is 2x^2 + x = 28
Factoring, we have:
x(2x + 1) = 28