I think it would be the conclusion.
its either a constant or a control im not sure which one
Yes
A control is something which you keep constant in an experiment. If for instance you were testing the effect of different liquids on the growth of plants, you would have a number of controls (like the type of plant and the amount of sunlight used).
Days of sunlight is not an accurate way to measure the amount of sunlight that an area gets. Typically, an area will be described with the amount of hours of daylight per day that it has, and currently in October, there are about 12 hours of sunlight.?æ
The amount of sunlight
its either a constant or a control im not sure which one
If I test to see the best amount of sunlight and water for growing violets, then it will be up to 8 or 10 hours of sunlight and water
It's what changes when you alter the manipulated variable. Examples: In an experiment testing how tall anplant grows in different amounts of sunlight - the manipulated variable is the sunlight, the responding variable is the height of the plant. In an experiment testing how much carbon dioxide produced when different amounts of baking soda react to vinegar - the manip. variable is the baking soda amount, the resp. variable is the carbon dioxide. In an experiment testing how different vitamins affect a person - the manip. variable is the vitamin, the resp. variable is the effect on the person.
amount of precipitation throughout the growing season and the amount of daily sunlight
i think plants can respond. but small amount of sunlight may cause to slow growing of the plant because it may not produce a large amount o foods that they need to be stong and i think plants will be malnourish. :)
In an experiment, the independent variable is altered, and the effect observed is the dependent variable, or outcome. The controlled variable is intended to be kept the same throughout the experiment so that changes in it do not affect the results.
An error occurring due to sampling in the experiment. It is known as S.E. (Standard Error).
A controlled experiment is different from others since it has the same amount of things except for only one variable. For example of a controlled experiment, If you have two plants and you want to see if it will grown better in sunlight or in darkness. So you put on in the closet and put the other one in a open window. You water and give both of them the same amount of soil, water, ferterizer. Except for the one variable which in this case is sunlight.
the amount of sunlight in the marine is 50%.
The dependent variable in an experiment is the thing that changes due to the experimentor changing the independent variable. Basically, its what you measure and record. For example: you create an experiment that observes the effects of the amount of sunlight on plants. You give one plant more sunlight than the other, leaving everything else exactly the same. That is your independent variable. Say you measure the height of each plant every week. Since the height is DEPENDENT on the amount of sunlight each plant got, the height is your dependent variable.
Yes
Some constants in your experiment should be: -the amount of water -the temperature of the water (unless your gonna have different temps.) -the strength of the pain reliever ...and more of that sort of stuff it all depends on what your aim is for your experiment and stuff like that.