Goldfish ABSTRACT The abstract is a condensed version of the entire lab report (approximately 250 words). A reader uses the abstract to quickly understand the purpose‚ methods‚ results and significance of your research without reading the entire paper. Abstracts or papers published in scholarly journals are useful to you when you are conducting library research‚ because you can quickly determine whether the research report will be relevant to your topic. The material in the abstract is written
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St Joseph ’s College Gregory Terrace Year 12 Biology Assessment Item 6: Extended Experimental Investigation Part A Term 1 2014 The Effect of Exercise on the Maintenance of Homeostasis Name: Jonah McLennan Class: C Teacher: Mrs Hart Group Members: James Wilkinson‚ Samuel Stark‚ Christopher Daly‚ Thomas Yip‚ Andrew
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Name___________________________ Period__________ Solve the following problems. Show all work‚ and report your answer to the correct number of significant figures. Be sure to report the proper units. : Densities of common substances at room temperature (g/cm3) Air 0.0013 Water 1.00 Aluminum 2.70 Gold 19.3 1. An object has a mass of 57.7 g and occupies a volume of 21.65 cm3‚ what is its density? 2. An object whose density is 1.98 x 103 kg/m3
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more soluble with one to four carbon atoms. Also‚ it may have an R group that consist of hydrogen or an alkyl group that changes its water solubility. Carboxylic acids with low molecular weight have odor at room temperature and higher molecular weight are solid and have low vapor pressure which have less molecules that allow us to smell it (Staudt 80). When H in the carboxyl group is replaced with an alkyl group‚ it becomes an ester group. “The reaction typically gives 60-70% of the maximum yield”
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Lab Report Assistant This document is not meant to be a substitute for a formal laboratory report. The Lab Report Assistant is simply a summary of the experiment’s questions‚ diagrams if needed‚ and data tables that should be addressed in a formal lab report. The intent is to facilitate students’ writing of lab reports by providing this information in an editable file which can be sent to an instructor
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Formal Lab Report Template Title Page Number of the experiment Title of the experiment Names of lab partners Date(s) on which the experiment was conducted Abstract = What are the main points of the entire report? Purpose or objective Key results Major points of discussion Main conclusion(s) Introduction = What is the background and purpose of the experiment? Purpose or objective One or two sentences‚ including the main method(s) used to accomplish the purpose. Background
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GASES Syllabus reference 9.3.2 1 Two identical gas flasks‚ A and B‚ are kept at the same temperature and pressure. Flask A contains 10 g of ethane gas‚ C2H6. Flask B contains sulfur dioxide gas‚ SO2. Calculate the mass of sulfur dioxide gas in flask B. moles ethane 10/30 0.33 mol moles SO2 0.33 mol mass SO2 0.33 64 21 g 2 What mass of nitric oxide‚ NO‚ is present in a 2.5 L flask at a pressure of 100 kPa and 0ºC? mole NO 2.5/22.71 0.1101 mol mass NO 0.1101 30 3.3 g 3 Carbon
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Molar Volume of a Gas Objective: The objective is to determine the volume‚ of one mole of hydrogen gas at STP using experimental data‚ known mathematical relationships‚ and a balanced chemical equation. Theory: The goal of this lab is to find the volume of one mole of hydrogen at STP. The experimenters will be working with hydrochloric acid and magnesium to find the objective. The acid in this lab will react to the magnesium and cause the water in the eudiometer to rise because of the reaction
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Charles’s Law – Lab Report Charles’ Law: Assuming that pressure remains constant‚ the volume and absolute temperature of a certain quantity of a gas are directly proportional. Mathematically‚ this can be represented as: Temperature = Constant x Volume or Volume = Constant x Temperature or Volume/Temperature = Constant Substituting in variables‚ the formula is: V/T=K Because the formula is equal to a constant‚ it is possible to solve for a change in volume or temperature using a proportion
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Calorimetry Lab Report Waris Butt PHY 112 Mr. Fasciano Class #18336 06/08/14 Purpose: Heat flow will occur between objects in contact until no more heat flow is detectable. Using calorimetry to analyze heat flow quantitatively and the equation: Q = mc ΔT‚ to determine the specific heat capacity of an object and heat flow from or to an object; respectively. Materials: Circle K 44 oz Styrofoam cup with lid Large Plastic
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