the output of a function; a variable whose value depends on the value of the input.
The dependent variable is dependent on the independent variable, so when the independent variable changes, so does the dependent variable.
It is calibrating.
the dependent variable are the things that stay the same
Quantity x+4 times quantity x+1.
On a line graph, where is the dependent variable placed?
price is dependent or independent?quantity
Yes it is.
A scaler quantity is one with magnitude (size) only. ie. not direction dependent. Speed is a scaler quantity, however, velocity is a vector quantity, it has size and direction.
Limiting reactant
The variable that you can manipulate in the experiment is always the independent variable. The quantity that changes as a result of your manipulation is the dependent variable.
A rock's color is dependent on the minerals present and quantity of those minerals.
There is no such quantity. Time is often cited as an example but it is always the dependent variable when studying the periodicity of pendulums, or waiting time in queues.
When one quantity is proportional to another, it indicates that one quantity is dependent on the other by a factor and increases/decreases with the other quantity. When the two quantities are equal, the output of both the quantities is said to be the same.
It is the quantity that is controlled. The dependent variable is the one that changes accordingly: it depends on the first one.
The independent variable is the number of tickets purchased and the dependent variable is the amount of money spent.
The pulse rate, since it's dependent on the quantity of caffeine, which is the changeable, independent variable.
x is commonly used as a variable to present some quantity, but I cannot say whether this is dependent or independent without knowing what x represents or to what you are asking it is independent from.