According to statistical theory, a measured probability distribution such as Fig. 1.1 can be approximated by a ``normal distribution function'':
where is the number of measurements between x and , N is the total number of measurements, is the mean and is the standard deviation. The normal distribution function is plotted in Fig. 1.2.
Figure 1.2:
Normal distribution function --
68% of the area under the curve lies within
of the mean and only 5% lies more than
away from the mean.
Note again that there are long tails, indicating that a small fraction of the measurements will be much more than away from the mean value. For the normal distribution, 5 % of the measurements will be more than away from while 68 % are within of . This well-known distribution is also sometimes called the ``Gaussian'' distribution, or the ``Bell-curve."