Magnets typically do not significantly affect radish plant growth. The control variable can be the radish plants grown without any exposure to magnets to compare against those exposed to magnets, allowing you to determine if the magnets have any impact on growth.
Answer One: Magnets affect the height of a plant. On radishes, it makes them shorter. On most plants, it causes it to grow faster and taller.Answer Two: Magnets exert magnetic fields, as do electrical currents through wire. These magnetic fields have no impact on water transport through plant tissues, or on any of the minerals plants take up from the soil. Nor would magnets improve the process of photosynthesis. Theoretically, magnets should not have any impact on plant growth. Of course, this would need to be tested, preferably in a double blind experiment to rule out any effect of bias contamination of the results.Three groups of plants--one with magnets, one with non magnetic masses of roughly the same mass and density in place of the magnets, and a third control group with neither magnets or fake magnets should be grown in homogeneous soil, subject to equal measures of sunlight and water. The expected result would be no statistically significant difference in germination rate, plant growth, flower and fruit production, or overall plant longevity.Ten years ago a student at a school in Selah, Washington conducted an experiment that demonstrated an effect on radish growth opposite of the claim stated in the first answer. A better experiment would likely not indicate any statistically significant impact of magnets on plant growth.
No.
It can affect the nutrients the plant gets and the chemicals and liquids it contains
soil!?
Magnets typically do not significantly affect radish plant growth. The control variable can be the radish plants grown without any exposure to magnets to compare against those exposed to magnets, allowing you to determine if the magnets have any impact on growth.
They don't. Magnets and magnetism has no effect on seed or plant growth whatsoever.
yes
It increase plant growth.
milk contains calcium and that is what which might affect plant growth
yes it affect the growth.
tropisms
what can effect your plant growth is the neutrinos. If you have a lot of neutrinos your plant can grow rapidly.
Answer One: Magnets affect the height of a plant. On radishes, it makes them shorter. On most plants, it causes it to grow faster and taller.Answer Two: Magnets exert magnetic fields, as do electrical currents through wire. These magnetic fields have no impact on water transport through plant tissues, or on any of the minerals plants take up from the soil. Nor would magnets improve the process of photosynthesis. Theoretically, magnets should not have any impact on plant growth. Of course, this would need to be tested, preferably in a double blind experiment to rule out any effect of bias contamination of the results.Three groups of plants--one with magnets, one with non magnetic masses of roughly the same mass and density in place of the magnets, and a third control group with neither magnets or fake magnets should be grown in homogeneous soil, subject to equal measures of sunlight and water. The expected result would be no statistically significant difference in germination rate, plant growth, flower and fruit production, or overall plant longevity.Ten years ago a student at a school in Selah, Washington conducted an experiment that demonstrated an effect on radish growth opposite of the claim stated in the first answer. A better experiment would likely not indicate any statistically significant impact of magnets on plant growth.
No.
tropisms
what can effect your plant growth is the neutrinos. If you have a lot of neutrinos your plant can grow rapidly.