Conclusion.
make a new hypothesis. if not the scientist continues believing in their hypothesis without any proof and becomes a mad scientist
It would become a theory. Then different predictions would need to be made to test other parts of it.
A scientific theory summarizes a hypothesis or group of hypotheses that have been supported with repeated testing. If enough evidence accumulates to support a hypothesis, it moves to the next step; known as a theory; in the scientific method and becomes accepted as a valid explanation of a phenomenon.
A scientific theory is just a hypothesis that has stood the test of repeated experimentation. A hypothesis is a wild guess, and the more fundamental you want to make your hypothesis, the more wild it becomes. A scientific theory can be invalidated by a single experiment, but can never be proved no matter how many experiments are conducted. It's often pointed out that one of the most important jobs of real scientists is to work to DIS-prove the current theories. The more that competent scientists are unable to disprove a theory, the more trustworthy and plausible the theory becomes.
The hypothesis can never really be proven correct; that's why scientists always say that they are 99.9% sure about things. If you drop a pencil, it will most likely always fall, but there is the slight chance that someday, it won't fall. Things in science always change.
A scientific theory
A proven hypothesis becomes a theory.
The Hypothesis Must Be Supported In Order For It To Become A Theory
They make continuous tests and evaluations until the hypothesis becomes validated and certified.
many differnet scientists doing expiraments that prove the hypothesis to be true-then it becomes a theory
make a new hypothesis. if not the scientist continues believing in their hypothesis without any proof and becomes a mad scientist
It would become a theory. Then different predictions would need to be made to test other parts of it.
Confirmed hypothesis becomes a theory.
Hypotheses can never be totally proven because only portions of populations are used to test them. There are many variables making it likely that results will not always be the same. However, tests with positive outcomes can strongly infer the likelihood that their hypotheses are correct.
The hypothesis can never really be proven correct; that's why scientists always say that they are 99.9% sure about things. If you drop a pencil, it will most likely always fall, but there is the slight chance that someday, it won't fall. Things in science always change.
A scientific theory summarizes a hypothesis or group of hypotheses that have been supported with repeated testing. If enough evidence accumulates to support a hypothesis, it moves to the next step; known as a theory; in the scientific method and becomes accepted as a valid explanation of a phenomenon.
There is no hard line between a hypothesis and a theory or a law. People do not often refer to new scientific theories as laws because we know they could be disproven at any moment.As a rule of thumb, depending on the quality of the experiment that is being used to test it, the hypothesis becomes a theory when it is verified by multiple scientists on multiple occasions. Once papers are published on the hypothesis and the papers do not encounter significant controversy, they begin to be referred to as theory.Even though there is a fuzzy line between them, there are certainly ideas out there that are definitely one or the other. For example, the theory of gravitation, or the theory of natural selection, or my hypothesis that it will rain tomorrow.