GS104 Lab Report Experiment # 2 Data Collection David Case: January 23‚ 2015 Experiment #2 Data Collection Objectives: Exercise 1: Formulating a Hypothesis about pitching speed. To form a hypothesis for the pitching velocity of a ball. Use a spreadsheet and math to calculate the actual velocity and determine the accuracy of the hypothesis. I will also roll a large ball to measure its velocity and graph its horizontal motion. Materials: Volley
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also increases. In other words‚ at 20% catalase concentration‚ the rate of reaction was only 4.220 mm/s while at 100% catalase concentration‚ the rate of reaction was 7.704 mm/s. This proves the positive correlation between catalase concentration and the rate of reaction. This occurs because as the enzyme concentration increases‚ there are more enzymes available to catalyze substrates. More enzymes means more reactions can take place at a time‚ thus a faster rate of reaction. Overall‚ based on the
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CMIS 320 Lab 1 Homework Part 1 a) A piano manufacturer wants to track all pianos it makes. Each piano has a unique serial number and a manufacturing completion date. Each instrument represents exactly one piano model‚ all of which have an identification number and model. The company produces thousands of pianos of a certain model‚ and the design is specified before any single piano exists. 1. Identify the degree and cardinalities of the relationship. Piano-Model: Cardinality: one-to-many
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In this lab the peroxidase enzyme is tested in a dormant avocado seed as well as an avocado seed undergoing the process of germination. A gas pressure will be used to test the seeds and see if the peroxidase enzyme is present in either of the seeds. A catalyst is very similar to track spikes. Spikes increase a runner’s speed‚ as a catalyst speeds up the chemical reaction time in a plant. Neither the catalyst nor shoes are changed in these actions. Enzymes are macromolecules that act like catalysts
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INET Lab Report 2 Microscope and the Cell Template Student: Mavon Riley Email: shantariley@yahoo.com Date: 09/05/2014 I. Purpose of the Microscope II. The Compound Microscope EXERCISE 2.1 – Label the parts of the compound microscope 1. Eyepiece 2. Arm 3. Course Adjustment 4. Fine Adjustment 5. Revolving Nose piece 6. Objective Lenses 7. Stage Clips 8. Stage 9. Iris Diaphragm Lever 10. Condenser 11. Light Source 12. Base EXERCISE 2.2 – Calculate microscope
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Enzymes are proteins that increase or decrease the rate of chemical reactions. They are generally globular proteins and are around 62 amino acids residues in size. What enzymes do is determined by their 2-dimensional shape. A lot of enzymes are bigger than the substrate they act on‚ but only a little part of the enzyme involved directly with the catalysis. Without enzymes the chemical reactions in the body‚ would be so slow‚ the body would shut down. And cell reactions would take too much energy
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How Enzymes Work In Different Environments By Sarah Smith Biology1111 October 20‚ 2011 Lab Partner: Nellie Greer ABSTRACT Peroxidase is an enzyme found in potatoes that catalyzes the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide‚ H2O2‚ into O2 gas and water. We examined the different pH environments that can affect the enzyme activity during the breakdown of H2O2. In order to do this‚ we added different levels of pH‚ low‚ medium‚ and high‚ into different test tubes with the enzyme and H2O2‚
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Abstract: Enzymes‚ molecules that speed up chemical reactions‚ are specific to one substrate. In this experiment the substrate hydrogen peroxide and the enzyme catalase will be used. The higher the concentration of potato extract‚ or catalase‚ the faster the reaction and the more substrate present will result in a decrease in the time of the reaction. The amount of concentrations of enzymes and substrates are changed to determine if the reaction is further catalyzed by a greater concentration of
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1. Compare the hash values calculated for example.txt that you documented during this lab. Explain in your own words why the hash values will change when the data is modified. They change to keep authentication and integrity. 2. Why are the MD5sum and SHA1sum hash values the same every time you calculate for the “example.txt” sample fi le? What if they were different when you re-calculated the hash value at the other end? These are the same to verify authentication and integrity.
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Taylor Durham Nutrition 101 Mr. Oropallo Lab Report #2: Fat Extraction From Food What is a triglyceride? Draw its structure. A molecule that contains three fatty acids attached at the oxygen atoms of glycerol. What are the differences between saturated and unsaturated fats? Drawn an example of each. If all bonds are single‚ the fatty acid molecule is saturated. If there is a double bond among the carbon atoms‚ the fatty acid molecule is unsaturated. What form does each of these fats take at
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