Seudónimo Seudónimo
  • 02-10-2018
  • Chemistry
contestada

Why might a scientist repeat an experiment if she did not make a mistake in the first one?

Respuesta :

camdenmisiewic
camdenmisiewic camdenmisiewic
  • 02-10-2018

The reason that a scientist might repeat her experiment, even if she did not make a (visible) mistake in the first one is to double check. Double checking can help you find out if the answer is constant and reliable, allowing you're information to be more trustworthy.

Answer Link

Otras preguntas

What is 70,030,000 in scientific notation
What effect did the Revenue Act of 1926 have on Americans?
-2m + 4m + 5 = -3 Tell me what you did please!
What's the square root of 98
The fastest a human has ever run is 27 miles per hour. How many miles per minute did the human run?
convert to a scientific notation  860,000,000,000 =
How do you translate "fifty-three plus four times c is as much as 21" in an equation
What is the GCF of 32 and 48
Equivalent decimal are decimal that have the same value. TrueOrFalse
Calculate the number of moles 2.25 g of Na2CO3  0.800 g of NaOH  17.75 g of Na2SO4