Look up the definition of an "hypothesis" and look up the definition of a "law." Now look at hypotheses are tested. Can a theory ever become law? What are the limiting factors of an hypothesis versus the limitations of a law, and how are each established? Answer those questions, and you will find your answer.
Answer this question… What can a hypothesis become if it is supported by repeated experimentation?
Observations form the basis of hypothesis, Mathematical modelling builds a therory based on the hypothesis. Proof of the validity of the model forms the law.
I would imagine any hypothesis could go on to be a law but depending on the subject, I would guess most do not
A hypothesis is a guess when a scientific law has been answered and proven.
The Hypothesis Must Be Supported In Order For It To Become A Theory
Answer this question… What can a hypothesis become if it is supported by repeated experimentation?
Observations form the basis of hypothesis, Mathematical modelling builds a therory based on the hypothesis. Proof of the validity of the model forms the law.
I would imagine any hypothesis could go on to be a law but depending on the subject, I would guess most do not
Avogadro's law: the principle that equal volumes of all gases (given the same temperature and pressure) contain equal numbers of molecules
A hypothesis is a guess when a scientific law has been answered and proven.
A scientific hypothesis can become a theory if the hypothesis is tested extensively and competing hypotheses are eliminated.
A scientific law is a description of observed phenomena that repeat (i.e. not a one-time event). A hypothesis seeks to explain the law. Hypotheses that are able to demonstrate the ability to make predictions about the law may become a theory. Hypotheses and theories attempt to explain laws, not the other way around.
Hypothesis
the Coleman principle of law is when sam has the sam haircut as his mother. the Coleman principle of law is when sam has the sam haircut as his mother.
A principle. The least, a hypothesis.
The Hypothesis Must Be Supported In Order For It To Become A Theory
Mendel's three parts of his hypothesis are: the principle of segregation (alleles separate during gamete formation), the principle of independent assortment (traits are inherited independently of each other), and the principle of dominance (one allele is dominant over another).