Glucose is a form of energy derived from carbohydrates. All living organisms requires energy to live and thrive. When glucose is ingested it is transported through the circulatory system by the various tissues and organs. This glucose will be used by the muscular and nervous system to complete day to day task. If the body is not in need of glucose it will be stored in the form of glycogen for a later date. The entire process starts with carbohydrates‚ for this paper we will be tracing the path of
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Bacterial Transformation Lab Report Backround: The plasmid pGLO contains an antibiotic-resistance gene‚ ampR‚ and the GFP gene is regulated by the control region of the ara operon. Ampicillin is an antibiotic that kills E. coli‚ so if E. coli‚ so if E. coli cells contain the ampicillin-resistance gene‚ the cells can survive exposure to ampicillin since the ampicillin-resistance gene encodes an enzyme that inactivates the antibiotic. Thus‚ transformed E. coli cells containing ampicillin-resistance
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Conclusion 1.2.2 Ashwath Ramesh 1. Why are there sutures on the human skull? What does this tell you about the actual structure of the skull? There are sutures on the skull because when you were born the skull was six parts and that allow the head to come out of the birth canal‚ then it will mend together into 3 parts. 2. Think about the structure and function of your backbone. Why do you think there are discs of cartilage between the bones in the vertebral column? There are
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(2) being able to apply that understanding of the microbial world so that the benefits to the Earth and humans are known(6). This lab specifically does not require the knowledge of what each organism does when introduced to another living organism‚ like a human. Figuring out the type of bacteria could help with further experiments. The idea of the unknown bacteria lab is to show
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Experiment AM1.2—Centrifugal Force Student name JunJie Liu Student ID 1512042 Experiment Date 11 Feb 2015 Lab group Mech 7 Introduction In this lab report we show the basic methods of measuring centrifugal force using two counter balanced bell-cranks spin on a turntable (shows in figure 1) and able to calculate the centrifugal force with given conditions shows in figure 1. *Figure
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Impurity Lab Report Aim: To find out the difference of the boiling point and melting point when adding impurity (salt) to water. Diagram: Method: 1.Set up the apparatus as shown in the diagram 2. Get a known amount of ice in the beaker (half full)‚ and a known amount of salt in another beaker 3. Measure the temperature (melting point) of the ice without adding any impurity (salt). 4. Measure the temperature (melting point) of the ice after adding the salt into the beaker. 5. Heat up
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Abstract: Bacteria consists of a large domain of prokaryotic microorganism in which can fight of antibiotics allowing the bacteria to become antibiotic resistant. In this lab report‚ we discover the most effective disinfectant that would work best in killing the harmful bacterial strain‚ Bacillus subtilis. KB testing or disc diffusion antibiotic sensitivity testing is measured through the diameter in millimeters to find how resistant the antibiotic to the bacteria. The hypothesis of Windex fell correctly
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NANYANG TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY [pic] ANALOG CIRCUIT DESIGN LAB312 REPORT (S2-B4a-04) Student name: xxx Student no: xxx Group: xxx Date of submission: xxx TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Introduction……………………………………………………….3 • 1.1 Background…………………………………………..3 • 1.2 The Capture Work Environment……….…………. 4 • 1.3 The PSPICE A/D Simulation Environment……… 5 • 1.4 Objective……………………………………………. 6
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Make sure that there are no problems with your lab that could affect the results before you turn on the light source‚ for example‚ a broken beaker or light source. 12. Make a table to record your results from the lab with. Make the table 4 columns wide‚ mark the first column with “Time”. Mark the second column with “number of floating chads in beaker #1”. Mark the third column with
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Mallory Charland February 9‚ 2015 Mutations of E. coli Lab Report Advanced Biology Deducing Mutations of the Lac Operon of E. coli Abstract: In this lab we determined a possible mutation in unique bacterial strains of E. coli by observing the proper responses of wild type E. coli Lac Operon as a control group. Mutated strains of E. coli were placed in four test tubes‚ each containing a different substance (lactose‚ glucose‚ water and lactose and glucose)
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