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A hypothesis is used to make predictions. Experiments are carried out to test these predictions. If the outcome of the experiment was not as predicted then the hypothesis is falsified. It is either rejected or modified. If the outcome of the experiment confirms the prediction then that provides some evidence that the hypothesis is true.Over time, after testing different predictions, there will be a significant amount of evidence in favour of the hypothesis, and all the main alternatives have been rejected. At that stage the hypothesis becomes a theory.
Fist the scientist figures out the aim of their experiment. Then they make a prediction. And then they make a theory before actually doing their experiment. After the experiment they make a conclusion and then evaluate their experiment (what went wrong, how things could be better...). Hope this helped! :)
predictions
He repeated his experiment because he wanted to make sure that it worked perfectly before describing the results to others.
Answer According to the scientific method, scientists perform an experiment. Answer I suppose you could say scientists perform an experiment next, but that is skipping some crucial points. How can you perform an experiment when all you have are ideas? Before you test out your hypothesis, you need to gather materials and draw up your procedure. Scientists just don't jump into something; they need a step-by-step plan of how they will carry out their test. In addition, they will also make predictions given their hypothesis. They need to know what result(s) will support or falsify the initial hypothesis.
completely different predictions. relativity predictions match experiment, ether predictions don't.
In a probability experiment, various outcomes are possible and the experiment is conducted to observe which outcomes occur. The experiment is performed repeatedly to collect data and determine the likelihood or probability of each outcome happening. The results of the experiment are analyzed to understand and make predictions about future occurrences of the event.
You make a prediction before experimentation-you predict what will happen. You make an inference after experimentation-you infer the results.
A hypothesis is used to make predictions. Experiments are carried out to test these predictions. If the outcome of the experiment was not as predicted then the hypothesis is falsified. It is either rejected or modified. If the outcome of the experiment confirms the prediction then that provides some evidence that the hypothesis is true.Over time, after testing different predictions, there will be a significant amount of evidence in favour of the hypothesis, and all the main alternatives have been rejected. At that stage the hypothesis becomes a theory.
Make predictions
Fist the scientist figures out the aim of their experiment. Then they make a prediction. And then they make a theory before actually doing their experiment. After the experiment they make a conclusion and then evaluate their experiment (what went wrong, how things could be better...). Hope this helped! :)
Large computers process the information and make predictions.
To make an experiment more accurate, repeat the experiment several times. If you do it 5 times there could be one or two anomalous, however do it 10, 15, 20 or 100 times you would find that about 95% of your results say one thing and that 5% say another, then your experiment will be dead accurate.
An experiment is the thing that you perform, and a hypothesis is the guess you make at the start (before the experiment) to determin what's going to happen.
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predictions
predict them!