The freezing and hypothermia experiments conducted on prisoners during World War II, particularly by Nazi doctors, were aimed at understanding the effects of extreme cold on the human body, especially for military purposes. Researchers sought to develop effective treatments for hypothermia and to improve survival rates of soldiers exposed to cold environments. These experiments were unethical, lacking consent, and caused immense suffering, illustrating the broader atrocities of the Holocaust.
In WWII Germany and Japan both needed to know the survivability of downed pilots in cold water. It must be said that the German experiments were well documented. Should you wish to be better informed regarding the Japanese experiments, then you should look up Unit 731 on a search engine.
yes he did have to be carried. he was carried by prisoners.
I assume you're talking about the Internal irrigation experiments carried out during nazi human experimentation. This a resucitation experiment when a prisoner was attempted to be revived after freezing experiments. It was when water was heated to blistering temperatures and forcefully irrigated throughout the stomach, bladder, and intestines. No one survived this.
benjamin franklin
he got shot
Hershey and Chase
Only when experiments are planed, carried out and analyzed can we know if our hypothesis is true and our methods are reliable. Oncethis is achieved, repeating experiments prove validity.
Joseph Mengele was a medical doctor in Germany, that simply chose to perform experiments on the prisoners in concentration camps - and was given free reign to do so - especially with twins (he was convinced that twins also carried the same mental thoughts - and could communicate mentally).
There may not have been a sufficient number of experiments carried out. The experiments may not have been carried out properly. There may have been incorrect assumptions made in deriving the theoretical probability.
Newton did experiments using prisms to show that white light contained all colours of light.
A laboratory is a workshop where scientific experiments or practical scientific work is carried out.
Experiments are carried out in agriculture to test the effectiveness of different methods, practices, or products on plant growth, crop yield, soil health, and pest control. By conducting experiments, researchers can gather data and evidence to improve agricultural practices, increase productivity, and address challenges such as climate change and food security.