It depends on the experiment!
The surface area is reduced by a factor 4, the volume by a factor 8.
The area changes by the square of the same factor.
Nothing. The cylinder's surface area does not have a GCF.
The surface area increase by a factor of 49.
By a factor of 22 = 4.
The independent variable of surface area typically refers to the factor that is manipulated or controlled in an experiment to observe its effect on a dependent variable. In experiments involving surface area, such as those studying reaction rates or heat transfer, the independent variable could be the size or shape of the material being tested. By varying the surface area, researchers can analyze how it influences outcomes like reaction speed or thermal conductivity.
As you would find the surface area of a normal shape using scale factors: to find the volume scale factor cubed, therefore to find the surface area of the hypercube, you do the scale factor to the power of four. geoffrz450@yahoo.co.uk
The factor that doesnt change in your experiment
variable is a factor in an experiment that can change
these nuts
The factor that doesnt change in your experiment
Control group