This classic diffraction experiment was conducted in 1911.
to find out if all element has the same mass or can pass through the tin foil in other words not all passed through
Well basically a investigation is when someone is trying to find out about something or someone while a experiment is testing a hypothesis and trying to get a conclusion
It is certainly possible. The conclusion from your experiment may prove to be tentative and you may need to design a better experiment to improve the reliability of the conclusion, or the experiment may suggest alternatives which you may wish to explore. Most of science is about that: an experiment leads to conclusions. Further experiments result in refinements to the conclusions and, occasionally, to the replacement of earlier theories with new models.
Scientists do their test more than once, or get their colleagues and peers to do the same experiment in order to verify the results of their experiment. This is called reproducing an experiment and its results.
Write an experiment to find the velocity of sound?
The presence of a tine nucleus
The presence of a tine nucleus
the presence of a tine nucleus
You are trying to answer a problem or question and test your hypothesis.
to find out if all element has the same mass or can pass through the tin foil in other words not all passed through
Well basically a investigation is when someone is trying to find out about something or someone while a experiment is testing a hypothesis and trying to get a conclusion
find out the aim of the experiment first.
The purpose or the motive. In other words what you are trying to find out
That is the point of doing the experiment. You are trying to find out if there is any relationship at all.
Giving some to whatever you're trying to poison and seeing if it dies. It's more a biological experiment than a chemical one.
An experiment to test whether a potato would float or sink would be to take multiple potatoes, and dunk them in whatever liquid you are trying to test.
Rutherford's theory of the atom, based on the gold foil experiment, showed that atoms have a small, positively charged nucleus at their center with electrons orbiting around it. This design helped Rutherford understand that most of the mass and positive charge of an atom is concentrated in the nucleus, while the electrons occupy most of the space around it.