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Impurities can cause a significant change in the reflective index of a liquid. Impurities totally affect the results of the experiment. It changes the reflective index and affect the concentration of the solution.
It increases the rate of reaction because there are more particles so they are more likely to collide
The context for an osmosis experiment typically involves studying the movement of water molecules across a semi-permeable membrane. It aims to investigate how concentration gradients affect the direction and rate of water movement, and how different solute concentrations impact osmotic flow. The experiment can be conducted using various materials, solutes, and concentrations to observe and measure the osmotic process.
concentration- hypertonic or hypotonic
Osmosis is a passive transport process. Therefore it can only go with the concentration gradient.
Basically more chlorine=less germination
If the experiment happened to involve the space you were traveling through, or if you landed on one of the instruments when you fell, you might "affect" it, but other than that, no. "Slipping" is not a quantum phenomenon.
Impurities can cause a significant change in the reflective index of a liquid. Impurities totally affect the results of the experiment. It changes the reflective index and affect the concentration of the solution.
It can, but need not, affect the outcome of the experiment variable.
That probably depends on the experiment.
Dilution reduces the concentration of a solution.
It depends on the experiment. Normally only one is tested at a time because they can affect the experiment. Variables are tested in a controlled experiment to see whether they affect the outcome and also how.
Fluid with a high solute concentration would be hyper-osmotic compared to water, and thus would be expected to exert osmotic pressure if separated from pure water with a semipermeable membrane.
yes
yes
vision, concentration
no. This is because light only affect the rate of photosynthesis and not the chlorophyll concentration in the leaf