Dependent Variable
the independent variable is the one you change to get the dependent variable. The control group is the thing that you leave the same throughout your experiment.
Hint: You don't want too many independent variables, it will mess up the experiment.
The DEPENDENT variable. It will be whatever you are observing a change in as a result of the independent variable changing. For example, I have an experiment where i measure microbial life's response to temperature. When i change the temperature too high there will be no life. Here the variable i control is the independent variable which is temperature. The dependent variable will be the microbial life.
i have the same thng the answer is dependent
The variable that is being tested is the Controlled Variable.
The dependent variable is affected by the independent variable. Is that what you were looking for?
The dependent variable is the part of the experiment affected by the independent variable
The Dependent variable
the dependent variable
a dependent variable is something that you cannot change but comes out as a result/an independent variable is something that you change in your experiment like the temperature of something or the amount of something
independent
A valid one. An experiment cannot conclusively prove anything if more than one independent variable is altered at a time. That being said, many dependent variables could show change and the experiment would still be valid, as long as only one independent variable was altered at a time. An experiment that changes only one variable at a time is called a controlled experiment.
a kind of example is the amount of sunlight * * * * * No it is not! The amount of sunlight given out by the sun depends on solar activity. It will be hugely greater in around 4.5 billion years when the sun becomes a red giant. The amount of sunlight incident on some point depends on the location of that point. Somewhere on Mercury will get a lot more sunlight than on Neptune! Also even if you restrict yourself to points on the earth, there are differences between latitudes, the time of year, cloud cover and so on. Even something that is apparently as independent of everything else, such as time, is not quite that independent. Gravity affects it. An independent variable is determined not by the variable itself but by the context of the "experiment". It is (or they are) variable(s) that affect the dependent variables but are not affected by them. An independent variable in one experiment may be the dependent variable in another. For example: age and height of people: I would say that age is independent and height is dependent. height and membership of basketball team: I would say height is independent and membership is dependent.
When you dont have a control in an experiment , there is no basis of comparrison. A proper experiment , has an independent variable - purposefully changed - a dependent variable - measured result - a constant (that ones kind of obvious), and a control . When an experiment doesnt have a control , its also harder to draw conclusion. With a control , you have something to base your hypothesis on . If this doesnt help , try checking your textbook or search experimental design on google or ask.com.
The independent variable, because it isn't affected by the other factors.
a dependent variable is something that you cannot change but comes out as a result/an independent variable is something that you change in your experiment like the temperature of something or the amount of something
The dependant variable is what you can't change, or decide, and it is affected by the independent variable. EX. If you were to see which liquid is the slowest, the independent variable would be the liquids that you can choose, and the independent variable would be how fast or slow they move, because it depends on what liquids you chose.
independent
A valid one. An experiment cannot conclusively prove anything if more than one independent variable is altered at a time. That being said, many dependent variables could show change and the experiment would still be valid, as long as only one independent variable was altered at a time. An experiment that changes only one variable at a time is called a controlled experiment.
a kind of example is the amount of sunlight * * * * * No it is not! The amount of sunlight given out by the sun depends on solar activity. It will be hugely greater in around 4.5 billion years when the sun becomes a red giant. The amount of sunlight incident on some point depends on the location of that point. Somewhere on Mercury will get a lot more sunlight than on Neptune! Also even if you restrict yourself to points on the earth, there are differences between latitudes, the time of year, cloud cover and so on. Even something that is apparently as independent of everything else, such as time, is not quite that independent. Gravity affects it. An independent variable is determined not by the variable itself but by the context of the "experiment". It is (or they are) variable(s) that affect the dependent variables but are not affected by them. An independent variable in one experiment may be the dependent variable in another. For example: age and height of people: I would say that age is independent and height is dependent. height and membership of basketball team: I would say height is independent and membership is dependent.
Heat will increase solubility of solids but not for gases, pressure will increase solubility of gases, surface area of solids increases solubility, agitation increases solubility. __________________________________________________________ Well it depends on what experiment you are doing but i say it would be between the independent variable and the dependent variable.
When you dont have a control in an experiment , there is no basis of comparrison. A proper experiment , has an independent variable - purposefully changed - a dependent variable - measured result - a constant (that ones kind of obvious), and a control . When an experiment doesnt have a control , its also harder to draw conclusion. With a control , you have something to base your hypothesis on . If this doesnt help , try checking your textbook or search experimental design on google or ask.com.
Neither 100 nor 16.6 is a variable of any kind.
the dependent variable has one value and the independent variable has no value
linear
A straight line shows direct proportion. That means that equal changes in the independent variable always produce the same change in the dependent variable.