Can you help me?
Beth wanted to find out whether or not salt affects how quickly ice melts. She used an ice cube tray to make 10 ice cubes of the same shape and size. Then, she placed the ice cubes on the same windowsill. She sprinkled each ice cube with one teaspoon of salt, and timed how long it took for the cubes to melt. She recorded all of the data. If someone else read the data, would he or she be able to make an accurate conclusion about the effect of salt on ice? A. No, because Beth should have used a different amount of salt on each of the ice cubes. B. No, because the data does not show how quickly the ice would have melted without the salt. C. Yes, because using 10 ice cubes gives enough trials for the results to be accurate. D. Yes, because Beth used only one independent variable and everything else was the same.
@pooja195 @iambatman
@AnswerMyQuestions @perl
Which do you think, and why?
I atcually don't know but... She sprinkled the same amount of salt on every ice cube. There's no positive or negative control in this experiment. Neither is there any variation in the amount of salt used, hence it's impossible to study the relationship between salt and time needed for ice to melt
A and B both look correct... :/
can't be both
Ik
?
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