so your answer is accurate
Trials are the amount of times a certain experiment is repeated.
Repeated trials of said experiment.
There is no set number of trials considered universally acceptable in an experiment. The number of trials needed can vary depending on the nature of the experiment, the desired level of statistical significance, and other factors. Typically, researchers aim for a sufficient number of trials to ensure reliable results.
So the experiment's results are more reliable
3
Experimental Probability
More trials of the experiment.
More trials of the experiment.
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data from repeated trials of the experiment
Scientists do multiple trials and find the mean of the trials to make their results reliable-this eliminates the impact any anomalies may have.
The probability that is based on repeated trials of an experiment is called empirical or experimental probability. It is calculated by dividing the number of favorable outcomes by the total number of trials conducted. As more trials are performed, the empirical probability tends to converge to the theoretical probability.