A scientific law means it is always, absolutely true. If it were found untrue, it would not be a law, just a theory.
No
Yes - if you get new data.
A scientific law is the description of a recurring event that occurs in nature. A scientific theory is an explanation of the law. The law does not change, but the theory may change when new data indicate that it needs to.
Law of Conservation of Matter.
Continuing research can turn up new or conflicting information regarding a theory or scientific law. It will then be changed even after general acceptance.
One example of scientific law, is The Law Of Gravity.
One example of scientific law, is The Law Of Gravity.
A scientific theory is more likely to be revised or replaced than a scientific law. Theories are based on evidence and can be modified as new evidence or information emerges. Laws, on the other hand, are well-established principles that have withstood extensive testing and are unlikely to change significantly.
Scientific law is proven (for the most part) and scientific theory is not proven yet."However scientific law is a law that cannot be broken.
A regular law has to do with the judicial system. A scientific law has to do with science.
the value of scientific law is the set of observations...
scientific law is unlike a scientific theory in a sense that its the next step above a scientific theory.A scientific law is one that has been proven, a scientific theory has not been proven yet.