---- The independent variable is what is observed and/or measured. In this case it is how well the person can see while wearing eye paint. ----
The distance the paintball went.
The IV = Independent VariableThe DV = Dependent VariableAND!!In science you'll learn:Hypothesis = an "If...,then" statement > EXAMPLE > If I mix red paint with blue paint, then it will turn purple > WHERE IS THE IV & DV?? > Remember: "If...[IV]...,then...[DV]" > so: mixing red and blue paint = IV, and turning purple = DV
Good question. I know regular paint does so I assume that car paint would. My thought on this if there is a fume the possibility exists that it could. Better be safe than sorry.
As long as you are only looking at sphere paintballs of .68 caliber the only real variable is exit velocity. As far as the sport is concerned exit velocity is determined by the field for safety reasons (and should NEVER exceed 300fps). While an argument can be made for adding backspin to the ball which will allow the paintball to travel further, in the sport the paint looses speed as it flies so even thought the ball is still in the air, it will not have enough energy to break on a player at the added distance. There is no type of marker that will shoot any further than any other marker since the exit velocity will be identical for each regardless of barrel length or any other factors.
You should not paint tortoises because it can affect their skin.
The residue from the paint before, during and after can leak into the surrounding enviroment.
please answer this question
Yes, it does.
by mood I hope it answers
It depends on what kind of paint you use. Please restate the question and specify the type of paint.
the paint will crack a lot easier compare to the right mixture..
Can you please repeat the question