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gravity

Acceleration Due to Gravity


Description

The gravity data frame has 81 rows and 2 columns.

The grav data set has 26 rows and 2 columns.

Between May 1934 and July 1935, the National Bureau of Standards in Washington D.C. conducted a series of experiments to estimate the acceleration due to gravity, g, at Washington. Each experiment produced a number of replicate estimates of g using the same methodology. Although the basic method remained the same for all experiments, that of the reversible pendulum, there were changes in configuration.

The gravity data frame contains the data from all eight experiments. The grav data frame contains the data from the experiments 7 and 8. The data are expressed as deviations from 980.000 in centimetres per second squared.

Usage

gravity

Format

This data frame contains the following columns:

g

The deviation of the estimate from 980.000 centimetres per second squared.

series

A factor describing from which experiment the estimate was derived.

Source

The data were obtained from

Cressie, N. (1982) Playing safe with misweighted means. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 77, 754–759.

References

Davison, A.C. and Hinkley, D.V. (1997) Bootstrap Methods and Their Application. Cambridge University Press.


boot

Bootstrap Functions (Originally by Angelo Canty for S)

v1.3-28
Unlimited
Authors
Angelo Canty [aut], Brian Ripley [aut, trl, cre] (author of parallel support)
Initial release
2021-04-16

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