Want this question answered?
Like almost all children, young Einstein had an intense curiosity about the workings of the natural world. He was also intensely able to (1) ask questions few had bothered to ask and (2) find answers to these questions. This helped him to never lose the curiosity he had as a child, which is a prerequisite for becoming a scientist.
Good question, it probably depends on what kind of scientist you ask. a paleontologist might say it was how the dinosaurs died, an astronomer might say is there life out there, and so on. Depends on who you ask
idkl
This begs the question by assuming that it was invented by a scientist. Ask the question "who invented the light bulb" - you'll get a better answer.
If you study physical science in a methodical manner, starting at the beginning which is Newtonian mechanics, and if you have a background in mathematics, you will find physical science to be perfectly understandable. And if you don't, you can always ask us a more specific question.
scientist ask questions about what they are going to experiment. Those questions help form a hypothesis.
Ask questions.
where does it come from or what it is like
Ask questions.
Ask questions.
conors russian5545
They will ask: "When will the sun explode?"
Scientists answer meaningful questions because its their job and they get paid alot of money do do it
Don't know Don't care Go ask someone who actually wants to answer these kind of questions because I don't Go ask a scientist (that's if you can find one) Hope this answer helped
Don't know Don't care Go ask someone who actually wants to answer these kind of questions because I don't Go ask a scientist (that's if you can find one) Hope this answer helped
They asked questions about anything which they did not understand.
Math