What is the aim of the experiment?
The purpose.
What is Newton's First Law?
Inertia
23
What is this object?
Beaker.
What animal is this?
Red Panda
What are the names of marge and homer simpsons children?
Bart, Lisa and maggie
What is the hypothesis of an experiment?
An educated guess, what you think is going to happen?
What does F=MA stand for?
Force = mass x acceleration
What is a mutation?
Any change in the DNA sequence
Name all the planets in the solar system.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus Neptune.
What is the name of the fairy in peter pan?
tinkerbell
What is the viral key chain that people lined up for?
La Bu Bu
What is the control variable in an experiment?
What are the colours in the visible light spectrum?
ROYGBIV
What is a transitional fossil?
A fossil that shows an inbetween evolution of 2 key organism.
What is geology?
365.25
What is the tallest animal in the world?
Giraffe
Moral principles that govern a person's behaviour or the conducting of an activity.
What is the phenomenon called when light bends as it passes from one medium to another, such as from air into water?
Refraction
What type of trait is shown here?

Recessive
What is seismology?
Study of earthquakes
How many concerts do i have planned this year?
27
Who painted the Mona Lisa?
Leonardo Da Vinci
How do you ensure your experiment is reliable?
Conduct repeat trials and calculate average.
How do crumple zones work in cars?
managing collision energy through the principles of impulse and momentum change. They increase the time it takes for the vehicle to stop, which, according to Newton's Second Law (\(F=ma\)), reduces the force exerted on the passenger cabin. They also absorb energy through controlled deformation, preventing the energy from being transferred to the occupants in an uncontrolled way.
What ship did Charles Darwin Travel on to get to the Galapagos Island?
Hms Beagle
What was the landmass called, when all the continents were formed together?
Pangea
What Star sign am I? (Teach Rebeira)
Cancer
Greece