A rectangle has no value - experimental or otherwise. Its area has a value, its perimeter, its aspect have values.
Experimental errors would cause the experimental value of specific heat capacity to be higher than the standard value.
If you increase the rectangle's length by a value, its perimeter increases by twice that value. If you increase the rectangle's width by a value, its perimeter increases by twice that value. (A rectangle is defined by its length and width, and opposite sides of a rectangle are the same length. The lines always meet at their endpoints at 90° angles.)
Yes.
Accuracy is when a known value agrees with an experimental value, but is not necessarily close in range.
Assuming x is one of the sides of he rectangle, any value greater than zero and less than 71/2.
true value is something that is true and experimental value is some thing that has been experimental with
the answer is error or experimental error.
Experimental errors would cause the experimental value of specific heat capacity to be higher than the standard value.
In science, and most specifically chemistry, the accepted value denotes a value of a substance accepted by almost all scientists and the experimental value denotes the value of a substance's properties found in a localized lab.
The percentage error is how accurate your experimental values compared to the accepted value. The equation is: [(experimental value - accepted value) / accepted value] x 100
ERROR is the experimental value-accepted value.
If you increase the rectangle's length by a value, its perimeter increases by twice that value. If you increase the rectangle's width by a value, its perimeter increases by twice that value. (A rectangle is defined by its length and width, and opposite sides of a rectangle are the same length. The lines always meet at their endpoints at 90° angles.)
EXACTLY
No because there are always experimental errors, instrument limitations, and deviations in measurements. This is called the uncertainty. Experimental values do not give true values but rather a value with an uncertainty.
Yes.
Percent Error = {Absolute value (Experimental value - Theoretical Value) / Theoretical Value }*100
Accuracy is when a known value agrees with an experimental value, but is not necessarily close in range.