I. Objective The first objective of the measurement of thermal conductivity & one-dimensional heat conduction experiment was to identify three different metal specimens by comparing their experimentally determined thermal conductivities to known thermal conductivity values of existing metals. The second objective of the experiment was to establish a connection between the thermal conductivities & temperatures of the metal specimens. Thirdly‚ the contact resistance of the interfaces between
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Before the experiment‚ we made some hypotheses based on predictions questions. First‚ yeast will metabolize sugar and produce a gas. This is because yeast is a living organism and all living organisms like yeast must use energy (such as sugar) to obtain energy. Yeast will metabolize sugar and gives off carbon dioxide as a by-product. For the second hypothesis‚ we were expecting that yeast will produce a gas when sugar is available. For the third hypothesis‚ we did not expect yeast to produce
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that is known as fermentation. Sugars in the form of sucrose are mostly used by humans (Alexander N.Glazer). Sugar cane and sugar beet are composed of 20% sucrose‚ 75% water‚ 5% cellulose and about 1% is inorganic salts (Alexander N.Glazer). Sucrose is extracted with water by using mechanical pressure from the sugarcane. On the other hard the beet is peeled and crushed. Sucrose that was extracted from sugarcane is a highly effective substrate that is used during yeast fermentation (Alexander N.Glazer)
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Ebrahim Abdulaziz Design Lab Report Research Question: How is the rate of yeast fermentation of 7.5g of yeast affected by using different companies of yeast (Bakon Yeast Inc.‚ Lake States Yeast LLC‚ Lesaffre Yeast Corp‚ Red Star Yeast Company‚ and Minn-Dak Yeast CO Inc.)? Background Information: Yeast is a fungal microorganism that is used to manufacture mainly bread and beer. It reproduces rapidly. Fermentation is the process by which yeast takes in sugar and releases alcohol and carbon
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BIO 111 Cell and Molecular Biology Lab Lab Report Grading Rubric - Yeast Respiration This is a 20-points assignment. It is graded out of 100 points‚ and then scaled down to 20. The report must be logical throughout and rationales must be explained well. Reminder: - A Graph MUST be shown; furthermore‚ you MUST add either a Table or a Figure. - 2 pages of text only (maximum). Tables‚ Graphs and Figures should be on separate‚ additional pages‚ without limits on the number of additional
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The Effect of Temperature on the Rate of Yeast Respiration Abstract Carbon dioxide is a waste product of yeast respiration. A series of experiment was conducted to answer the question; does temperature have an effect on yeast respiration? If the amount of carbon dioxide is directly related to temperature‚ then varying degrees of temperature will result in different rates of respiration in yeast. The experiment will be tested using yeast and sugar at different water temperatures. I
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In this lab my group and I tested to see how yeast would react to different substances. Yeast is a fungi that releases carbon dioxide which can be used in the process of bread making. During this lab we used sugar‚ warm water‚ cornstarch‚ yeast‚ a gas sensor‚ plastic cylinders‚ and a laptop. The process of this lab was to create cellular respiration‚ which is what cells do to break up sugars into a form that the cell can use as energy. When yeast and a certain substance were combined‚ this substance
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ESCI 1102 Lab 8 Population Change Directions: Listed below are this Learning Module lab questions to answer. When completed‚ upload this file back to the Lab dropbox (where you downloaded in the first place). FYI: I really like it when the answers are in a different format/color than the questions. It helps when grading. Part 1. Population Biology is an online virtual lab that will illustrate how competition affects population growth. Follow the instructions given. Two species of unicellular
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Fiber Optic Connector Assembly Oven-Cured Epoxy Application and Connector Assembly: 1. Set the curing oven to the temperature recommended by the epoxy manufacturer. 2. Follow manufacturer’s instructions for mixing the epoxy. 3. Secure needle to the syringe and load the syringe with epoxy while ensuring it is free of air pockets. 4. Insert the needle tip into the back of the connector until it bottoms out against the ferrule. Maintain pressure and slowly inject epoxy until a bead appears on the end
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In this experiment‚ we strove to determine how effective different sugars were in fermentation by measuring their CO2 emissions. An increased CO2 production implies the substrate is undergoing glycolysis more often‚ resulting in increased ATP synthesis. For a more accurate interpretation of the results‚ glucose acted as a positive control‚ displaying the most efficiency in fermentation as shown in Figure 1 and Figure 2‚ while ethanol‚ which is a byproduct of fermentation‚ acted as a negative control
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