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If your hypthesis is not supported, you may need to think about it; it may then be revised and tested again
The first step in the scientific method is to make observations. Following this is making a hypothesis and performing experiments. Other parts of the scientific method include analyzing data and trying multiple hypotheses.
An hypothesis is an untested theory or conjecture, so when a hypothesis is tested and passes the test it becomes a proven theory, or possibly a law or reason or explanation. Until then it is an as-yet-unproven possibility or probability. Just make certain that the facts are not twisted to 'prove' the hypothesis, and the results are confirmed by other experiments and experimenters. It is even better if it becomes accepted by those who didn't agree with the idea in the first place, but that is not always possible! -- However, a theory is not born from one tested hypothesis, but many. A theory is the result of multiple hypotheses that are said to be true through multiple experiments. Also, a theory may never be actually proven, but merely accepted as the most reasonable explanation. Since science is constantly changing, theories are constantly being formulated to explain things about ourselves or our surroundings.
so it can be more accurate that's why they conduct multiple experiments and if you just rely on one you have a better chance of getting it wrong
yes
If your hypthesis is not supported, you may need to think about it; it may then be revised and tested again
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.
The first step in the scientific method is to make observations. Following this is making a hypothesis and performing experiments. Other parts of the scientific method include analyzing data and trying multiple hypotheses.
Repeatability...multiple experiments conducted under identical conditions serve to prove the results of the initial experiement.
controlled experiments!
An hypothesis is an untested theory or conjecture, so when a hypothesis is tested and passes the test it becomes a proven theory, or possibly a law or reason or explanation. Until then it is an as-yet-unproven possibility or probability. Just make certain that the facts are not twisted to 'prove' the hypothesis, and the results are confirmed by other experiments and experimenters. It is even better if it becomes accepted by those who didn't agree with the idea in the first place, but that is not always possible! -- However, a theory is not born from one tested hypothesis, but many. A theory is the result of multiple hypotheses that are said to be true through multiple experiments. Also, a theory may never be actually proven, but merely accepted as the most reasonable explanation. Since science is constantly changing, theories are constantly being formulated to explain things about ourselves or our surroundings.
so it can be more accurate that's why they conduct multiple experiments and if you just rely on one you have a better chance of getting it wrong
CimTrak is supported on multiple Windows, Linux, Unix, and Macintosh operating systems
yes
A hypothesis is just a proposed outcome of an action and it needs further proof through experiment before it is considered to be a fact. There are multiple possible outcomes if a hypothesis is tested.
They make sure the result is right
true