The variables that you keep the same between the control and experimental groups are the constant variables.
The temperature must remain constant.
When a scientific experiment is carried out in a controlled setting, all variables are kept the same except for the control variable. The control variable is something that is constant and unchanged in an experiment, and is held constant to test the relative impact of independent variables.
Control Variable = kept in constant in a experiment Experimental Variable = changes in a experiment
dependent variable is current and independent variable is resisitance
Boltzmanns constant
Constant is a number with no variables. For an example, 12a, but this is a constant 12.
Variables mean whose values are not constant, such as x, y , z this is in algebra
Constant variables are constant, they do not change. Derived variables are not constant. They are determined by the other values in the equation.
If two variables are in direct relationship then the ratio of the two variables is known as the constant of proportion between them. In algebraic form, if X and Y are the two variables, then direct proportionality implies that Y = cX and c is the constant of proportionality.
No they are not the same. A constant variable keeps going at a constant rate.
It means something that doesn't change, like a number.
The constant k is a...constant specific for the system considered.
constant
All variables except one, the experimental variable, are kept constant in an experiment.
The two types of variables are the CONSTANT and CONTROL.
There are 'constant variables' , 'independant variables' and 'dependent variables' Constant Variable- things in the experimment that should be kept the same Independant variables- something that can be varied in an experiment Dependant variable- something that can be affected