A good control would be ten mice given food with no vitamins added.
Control and Experiment group is what you would normally have in an experiment
An experiment must have a control to show what would happen if no factors were changed.
no the control is that which is used to test your hypothesis. if mentos would blow up if you use caffeine and you used water, coke, and milk the water would be the control without it you cant do an experiment.
This probably refers to the 'control'. In a very simple experiment you may add food colouring to a solution to see what colour it sent the solution. You would also have a second sample of the solution which you would not add food colouring to. This would be your control and would serve the purpose of making sure that the solution wouldn't have changed colour by itself anyway. It would also be there for comparison, so that you could compare the colours to see just how much the colour had changed.
Ten mice given food with no vitamin added
That would be the control....i think....:)
The control in a science experiment is the same thing as a constant. It is something that you keep the same the entire experiment. For example if you were testing how various locations affect temperature your constants would be the thermometer you used and the time for measuring the temperature. If you don't have a constant than your experiment results won't be accurate.
The modified choke could be the control
You need a control for any experiment. It doesn't sound like this particular experiment is of the utmost importance but it's a good habit to get into if you plan more important ones. I have no idea what the control would be.
The control is what you keep the same through the whole experiment. I'm doing an experiment for a science fair this yer and its: What things can remove permanent marker from fabric. my control would be, the amount of "stuff" i use and the type or marker. hope it helps ♥
This would be 'the control group' which experiments are compared to.
what can be the constant in the paper plane experiment