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The angle of the rocket. The amount of water in the rocket.
Yes it will float until it is less denser than oil and water. But just after increasing its density by absorbing enough water or oil it will start sinking.
an example of capillary action is licking a camels sweaty armpits while enjoying a glass of warm coleslaw^ okay, whoever gave this answer before..this didn't help me at all when i first wanted the answer to this question.anyways, i think this is more helpful:Capillary Action is the term used to describe the tendency of a fluid in a tube to seek a higher level than that of the fluid in the surrounding vessel. Like when you place a straw in a glass of soda and the level of the soda in the straw is a little bit higher than that in the glass.The movement of liquid along the surface of a solid liquidLeaves absorbing water, towels absorbing water, paper towel absorbing spills, tree roots absorbing water from soil
The independent variable is the variable that does not depend on other variables. In other words, the independent variable controls and varies the result of the experiment as the independent variable controls the dependent variable. For example, if you are experimenting on how long it takes water to boil, the independent variable would be time and the dependent variable would be temperature. Out of the two colours, black and red, black absorbs more heat than red. In fact, black is the colour that absorbs most heat out of all the colours. This is because if all of the seven colours from the light are absorbed, the combination becomes black. On the other hand, white reflects all seven colours from the light, so white is practically no colour at all.
This is its natural frequency. And just on another note, yes, ur mom does taste like water.
The independent variables are the milk and water, while the dependent variables are the plants, because they don't change.
The controlled variable is the type of soybean, and the changed variable is the type of water that the soybean is absorbing.
'Variables' are any factors that can be controlled, changed or measured. There are two types: the independent variable and the dependent variable. The independent variable is the condition that you change and the dependent variable is what you are observing. So if you are trying to measure the effect of water on plant growth the water would be the independent variable and the plant growth would be the dependent variable.
These are: temperature, coffee granulation, type of coffee.
The independent variable was the amount of skittles or M&Ms. One of our controlled variables was the amount of water.
In science, independent variables are variables that you control the change of, to see how somethings changes as a result of changing these variables. Dependent variables are variables that change because the independent variables are changed, but you don't change directly. A good example of this would be an experiment where you're measing how cold a glass of water gets after putting in different amounts of ice in it and wating 5 minutes. The independant variable would be the amount of ice you put into each glass, because that's what you're directly changing. The dependent variable is how cold each glass gets, because that's the result you're trying to see by changing the independent variable - it changes because something else changes. Additionally, when graphing, independent variables are put on the x-axis (horizontal line), and dependent variables are put on the y-axis (vertical line).
I dont know about the control but the independent variable is the amount of salt water and the dependent variable is the amount of water and salt rendered.
It can be, it depends on your experiment. Independent variables are the variables in an experiment that will not change. If you want to do an experiment that tests how something reacts with water, then starting with a clean controlled water sample for each test would be necessary and an independent variable. Conversely, if you were testing the cleanliness of multiple water sources, then the ideology of clean water would be your dependent variable, which would change upon each testing. WIth your given information I cannot say whether or not you would want water to be either a dependent or an independent variable for your experiment.
tagina
The quantity of salt added to water is under your control and it will change the boiling point of water,i,e. the temperature of water. So quantity of salt is an independent variable while the temperature of water is dependent variable, when other factors are kept constant.
Independent . . . what substance the 7th grader drinks Depoendent . . . his pulse rate
An independent variable or manipulated variable is when you change it on purpose. For example, say your scientific problem was "Does certain substances affect how fast water is frozen?" Those substances are the indepentant variables. A dependant variable is how you measure the dependant variable. For instance, the dependant variable would be how fast the water is frozen. The things they have in common are that they are both variables and are subject to change.