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Read the observation, question, and hypothesis.

Observation: Hotter water seems to produce more bubbles than cold water when it is mixed with dish soap.
Question: Does water temperature affect the amount of bubbles that are produced from dish soap?
Hypothesis: Hot water produces more bubbles than cold water when it is mixed with dish soap.
D’Angela will mix soap and water in a clean beaker four times. To test her hypothesis, which conditions should change or remain the same each time?

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

the answer is 'the water, and dish soap amount should be same while the temperature of the water should be different'.

Step-by-step explanation:

User Tssch
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In order to test the hypothesis that hot water produces more bubbles when it is mixed with dish soap, certain conditions should be kept constant during the experimentation. The amount of the water and the dish soap used in the experiment need to remain the same, as the effect of these are not being observed in the experiment. However, the temperature of the water needs to be different each time so that the effect of hot water on the production of bubbles can be known.

Hence, the answer is 'the water, and dish soap amount should be same while the temperature of the water should be different'.

User Dickster
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