Newton’s Second Law Lab Preliminary Questions 1. When you push on an object‚ the magnitude of the force on the object directly affects it’s motion. If you push harder on the object‚ it’s motion is larger. 2. If we have a bowling ball‚ and a baseball each suspended from a different rope‚ and hit each ball with a full swing of a baseball bat‚ the ball that will have the greatest amount of change in it’s motion will be the baseball. This is true because the baseball has a smaller mass than a bowling
Premium Classical mechanics Newton's laws of motion Mass
Lab 5 NEWTON’S THIRD LAW AND Tension FORCES "Many a small thing has been made large by the right kind of advertising." -Mark Twain "What is the difference between unethical and ethical advertising? Unethical advertising uses falsehoods to deceive the public; ethical advertising uses truth to deceive the public." -Vilhjalmur Stefansson I saw a subliminal advertising executive‚ but only for a second. -Steven Wright • To develop an understanding and consequences of Newton’s Third
Premium Force Newton's laws of motion Classical mechanics
The Ideal Gas Law Lab taught me that hydrogen is lighter than air‚ and can be ignited. The materials used for the experiment include 0.05 grams of magnesium‚ 1M H2SO4‚ water‚ a 100mL graduated cylinder‚ and a beaker. The hydrogen can be ignited with a match. First‚ the beaker is filled with water. The acid is then added to the graduated cylinder‚ with about ¾ inch left at the top‚ which is space for water. Afterward‚ the magnesium is added to the graduated cylinder‚ and it is inverted upside down
Premium
Carbon nanotube 1 Carbon nanotube Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are allotropes of carbon with a cylindrical nanostructure. Nanotubes have been constructed with [1] length-to-diameter ratio of up to 132‚000‚000:1‚ significantly larger than for any other material. These cylindrical carbon molecules have unusual properties‚ which are valuable for nanotechnology‚ electronics‚ optics and other fields of materials science and technology. In particular‚ owing to their extraordinary thermal conductivity
Premium Carbon nanotube
durable‚ extensively cross-linked protein called hard ____. 2. A hair grows in a diagonal epithelial tube called a ____. 3. Coarse‚ pigmented hair is called ____‚ whereas most of the body hair of women and children is called ____. Most of the hair within this tube is called the root‚ but it has a dilation at its base called the ____‚ where it derives all its nutrition from blood capillaries. 4. The surface of a hair consists of scaly‚ overlapping cells called the hair ____. Most hair colors
Premium Hair Hair follicle Skin
Senior School STUDENT NAME: _______________________________________ GRADE 11 TEACHER: ______________________________ Date submitted: ____________ IB Chemistry TOPIC 1: Stoichiometric Relationships SUB TOPIC: Gas Laws ASSESSMENT TASK Laboratory Report INVESTIGATION: Investigating the Relationship Between Pressure and Volume Using Data Loggers YEAR 11 IB Chemistry ASSESSMENT CRITERIA The result for this Assessment Task will contribute to your A – E grade for the semester
Premium Measurement
Jacques Charles and his Law In 1787‚ Jacques Charles performed an experiment that would change science forever. And all that he had to do was to fill 5 balloons to the same volume with different gases and to raise the temperature. From this experiment came Charles’ Law. The law that affects everything from footballs to the human lungs. Jacques Charles is very important to today’s scientific studies because of what he invented‚ his achievements‚ and his studies on volume and temperature. Jacques
Premium Science Scientific method Chemistry
Ideal Gas Law Lab 1. Procedure: First‚ we used a balance to weigh the canister of gas‚ and recorded that mass as the original weight. Then‚ we filled a large bucket with water and recorded the temperature. We then filled a small test tube with water at the same temperature and poured that water into a graduated cylinder to measure the original volume of water in the tube. We then poured the water back into the test tube and placed the tube into the bucket with the opening upwards‚ turning the
Free Gas Pressure Gas laws
Title: PROP0332 Evaluation of the Gas Law Constant Abstract: The result of the change in volume was approximately 22 CC or 0.00084 mol. This translates into the average for the R constant being 83.8L*atm/K*mol. The four determinations ensured that the results were accurate because more than one trial helps somewhat prevent error. Approximately 0.20g of the Mg ribbon was used for these determinations. Introduction: 1. Theory If the temperature of a gas sample was held constant‚ its volume
Premium Pressure Gas Ideal gas law
2.MATERIALS and METHODS 2.1. Nature of Reactants 2.1.1 We placed 3mL of 3 M HCl into each of 3 seperate test tubes. Next we added mossy zinc to the first test tubes‚ Sn granules to the second and Cu filings to the third and compared the rates of evolution of hydrogen gas in each test tube. 2.1.2. We mixed 3mL of 0.02 M KMnO4 and 2mL of 3 M H2SO4 in a test tube and stirred using a glass rod. Next‚ we divided the solution into two. We added 2mL of 0.03 M Na2C2O4 solution to the first half and
Premium Chemical reaction Gas Hydrochloric acid