The word comes from the Latin "experiri" or "expertus" meaning: to try out, test, experience or prove. The modern word has essentially the same meaning being both a noun and a verb depending on context. An experiment is an activity used in the fields of science to gather information on a particular subject in order to further our understanding of it. To experiment is to carry out an experiment in other words to try, test, eperience and/or prove something.
You must repet a exsperiment several times to make sure that your exsperiment is right.
You must repet a exsperiment several times to make sure that your exsperiment is right.
No -.-
Yes very common
So that no harmful chemicals go into your eyes or irritate them.
Nobody can answer this but you. The concluding sentence must be what you have learned from the experiment. You'll have to write your own sentence based on what your data was.
They DON'T have to. They use models to save time and money - but the results are always tentative.
Cats both wild and domestic, hawks, rat snakes, bull snakes, skunks, and coyotes (not the cartoon kind).
That is entirely up to you. If your costume is a short dress or it is cold and windy where you live, you should definitely consider wearing panties on Halloween. if your a guy and you want to exsperiment on hallowheen go for it no ones stoping you
You are doing this because you are developing new thing like breast , pubic hair and soo onn ..... this is happening because you want to exsperiment with your vagina
Scientific work is something like a exsperiment and you will need some objects to do a scientific work.Human activitys is fun and you could even do scientific work and human activitys together.
Thomas's experiments, particularly the discovery of the electron through cathode rays, significantly altered Dalton's atomic model. While Dalton proposed that atoms were indivisible and solid spheres, Thomas's findings introduced the concept of subatomic particles, demonstrating that atoms are composed of smaller components. This led to the development of the "plum pudding" model, where electrons are embedded within a positively charged "soup," challenging the idea of atoms as indivisible entities. Ultimately, this shift paved the way for more complex atomic theories and models.