The dependent variable for global warming is typically the temperature of the Earth's atmosphere and oceans over time. This variable reflects the changes in climate patterns and is influenced by factors such as greenhouse gas emissions, deforestation, and land use changes. Monitoring temperature changes helps assess the impact of human activities on global warming and climate change.
The Sun,Earth's orbit, the oceans,greenhouse gases,and dust.
Independent variables are controlled or manipulated by the researcher to determine their effect on the dependent variable. Dependent variables, on the other hand, are the outcome or response that is measured in an experiment. The independent variable causes a change in the dependent variable.
A dependent variable is a variable dependent on the independent variable. A control variable is something you want to try to keep the same. A dependent variable is something you measure. An independent variable is something you change.
No, chlorine has no effect on Global Warming.
No, global warming does not directly cause thinning of the ozone layer. The thinning of the ozone layer is primarily caused by the release of certain chemicals such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) into the atmosphere. Global warming and ozone depletion are separate environmental issues with distinct causes and impacts.
The Sun,Earth's orbit, the oceans,greenhouse gases,and dust.
The dependent variable is dependent on the independent variable, so when the independent variable changes, so does the dependent variable.
dependent variable
global warming!!!!!!
is dependent on the independent variable
There is the mathematical use and statistical use of the word "dependent" as explained on the related link. The mathematical use is a dependent variable is the outcome of a function with one or more independent variables. The statistical definition in the setting of an experiment, is similar, it is a variable which is expected to be affected by changes in independent variables. Example: If I don't eat (quantity of food- independent variable), I will be hungry (dependent variable). I will not have as much energy (second dependent variable). But nothing is perfect in experimentation. The circumstances of the experiment with numerous unknown relationships may cause unexpected results. In observational studes, with typically less control, variables can be hypothesized (or conjectured) to be related, i.e. global warming causes artic ice to melt, and artic ice melting leads to more global warming. This would also be called a feedback effect. I can produce a dependent series of numbers from an independent series. If I take a series of random numbers of size N which come from a given distribution, and rank them from low to high , with n = 1 for the lowest and n = N for the highest, the ranks become dependent variables. A change in one value could affect the rank of another variable. I have included some more information on dependent variables. See related links.
Yes, the dependent variable is the variable which is measured.
The dependent variable is the outcome or response that is being measured in an experiment. It is what is affected by changes in the independent variable, which is the variable being manipulated. The dependent variable is dependent on the independent variable.
The independent variable is the variable that is altered by the scientist, and the dependent variable's value is dependent on the value of the independent variable.
Technically you can't control the dependent variable. However, by controlling and monitoring the Independent variable, (the variable which determines the dependent variable) you could lead the dependent variable to produce favourable results.
yes
Yes, criterion variable is the same as a dependent variable.