Reference terms from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

Experimental data

Experimental data in science and engineering is data produced by a measurement, test method, experimental design or quasi-experimental design. In clinical research any data produced are the result of a clinical trial. Experimental data may be qualitative or quantitative, each being appropriate for different investigations.

Generally speaking, qualitative data are considered more descriptive and can be subjective in comparison to having a continuous measurement scale that produces numbers. Whereas quantitative data are gathered in a manner that is normally experimentally repeatable, qualitative information is usually more closely related to phenomenal meaning and is, therefore, subject to interpretation by individual observers.

Experimental data can be reproduced by a variety of different investigators and mathematical analysis may be performed on these data.

 
Note:   The above text is excerpted from the Wikipedia article Experimental data, which has been released under the GNU Free Documentation License.
 

Check out these latest Nanowerk News:

 

Self-driving chemistry lab discovers catalysts that can switch products on demand

A self-driving lab rapidly screened catalyst recipes, finding tunable systems that switch chemical products by changing reaction conditions

Electron buildup unlocks precision control of Janus 2D semiconductors

Plasma treatment weakens sulfur bonds, enabling precise room-temperature fabrication of Janus 2D semiconductors for advanced electronics.

Sugar-coated nanoparticles show promise for treating most aggressive form of brain cancer

Sugar-coated lipid nanoparticles carried tumor-suppressing mRNA across the blood-brain barrier, shrinking glioblastoma tumors in mice.

A better way to model the behavior of metal alloys

Researchers' approach captures subtle atomic patterns, improving predictions of material properties.

Next-gen instruments bring nanomaterials into sharper focus

New instruments on the horizon promise the most precise tools yet to study and experiment on the smallest and most complex materials ever manufactured.

Listening for quantum oscillations in the Kondo insulator YbB12

Ultrasonic measurements reveal magnetic quantum oscillations only after YbB12 transitions into a metallic state.

Nano-focusing: Why speed and precision matter in surface metrology and microscopy

Fast piezo and voice-coil nano-focusing systems keep microscopes and metrology tools sharply focused with nanometer precision and millisecond response.

Creating complex light patterns using a two-century-old light phenomenon

Researchers used the Poisson spot effect to create stable optical skyrmions with a laser and disc, simplifying studies for photonics and computing applications.

Graphene catalyst design could cut the cost of hydrogen fuel cells

Simulations pinpoint an electronic sweet spot where nitrogen-doped graphene can drive oxygen reactions more efficiently than platinum.

Cleanroom-free process brings electronic skin to curved robots and wearables

A UV laser and 3D printer create large flexible tactile sensor arrays directly on target surfaces, simplifying fabrication and rapid prototyping.