No. They can not.
F=mg where g is the gravitational constant, and the independent variable in force calculations
Well, they're both variables.
No they are not the same. A constant variable keeps going at a constant rate.
The independent variable is the thing you change, the dependent variable is the variable that changes because of the independent variable, it could also be referred to as the effect, and the control group is the constant, the thing that stays the same and the variable that you compare your results to.
1.49 is a constant: there is NO variable - independent or dependent!
independent variables :):):):):):):):):):):):)
No. They can not.
Control
F=mg where g is the gravitational constant, and the independent variable in force calculations
The control, the constant, the independent variable, and the dependent variable.
Well, they're both variables.
A constant is something that will ALWAYS remain the same in your experiment. For instance, the materials you use and the unit of measurements you use are examples of constants. An independent variable changes with the experiments.
No they are not the same. A constant variable keeps going at a constant rate.
A constant variable is one that is not the independent variable (the one you are changing) or the dependent variable (the one you change). Constant variables are so named because in order for the experiment to be legitimate, it is expected that the scientist control them, thus keeping them constant across all trials. This ensures that changes in the dependent variable are only the result of changes in the independent variable.
dependent variable is current and independent variable is resisitance
The independent variable is the thing you change, the dependent variable is the variable that changes because of the independent variable, it could also be referred to as the effect, and the control group is the constant, the thing that stays the same and the variable that you compare your results to.