Tuesday, February 18, 2014

The Yeast Lab

Abstract
For our project, Adam and I, compared the growth of yeast based on the level of sugar placed in prior to growth.  The expected result was that the more sugar we put in the test tubes to make the yeast, the faster it would rise.  So we tested different sugar levels while growing yeast to see if this would hold true.
Introduction
While learning about cell respiration Adam and I were asked to come up with a variable that we could test to find out what directly affects cell respiration.  So using yeast that Mr. Quick provided we wanted to know if amount of sugar would affect what rate the yeast cells grew at.  We then tested 4 different sugar levels to find out their effects.
Hypotheses
We predicted that that the more sugar we put into the test tubes the more it would have to go through cell respiration and it would grow faster.
Materials
Our control was .1 g of sugar while our variables were .5, 1, and 1.5 grams of sugar. We put these in 4 different test tubes along with salt, water and the yeast cells.
Procedure and Conduct
Our procedure was simple, we mixed all of the materials together in order and put them in sealed test tubes connected to syringes.  We then would gently push on the syringes and then let them pop back up.  We did this over and over every five minutes to see how much gas was being produced in the test tubes.
Conclusion
The 1 and 1.5 grams of sugar were higher than the control respectively, but the .5 was above by quite a bit.  There is a couple things that this can be accredited to.  There could have been a problem with the syringes that measured the gas the yeast produced.  Another variable may have been made when the ingredients were being mixed; ie. too much sugar, etc.  So other than the outlier, this lab proved our hypotheses correct that more sugar means more respiration and more growth.

Monday, February 3, 2014

Forensics Quiz

Well in the previous class we looked at a bunch of forensic cases to figure out the cause of death.  Naturally, Adam and I created the chupicabra who went on a killing spree to explain all these deaths.  This case was assigned to us as a quiz.
The answer to this quiz is obviously that the chupicabra saw the man on Thompson Creek Trail and wanted the man dead because he could run faster then him.  So he went into a tree and waited for him to run by. When the man passed the chupicabra fired down hitting him on the first shot.  This shot went through past his left third rib and refracted off of his right 8th rib.  The bullet through all of this passed through his heart and bounced out exploding his stomach.  He died in pain from the acids eating his organs while he bled out.  Three other possibilities are that the bullet hit his lung and he died of oxygen deprivation, the bullet miraculously only it his liver before exiting and he died from blood poisoning, or finally the shrapnel  of the bullet somehow missed all vital organs and he died of internal bleeding.  These three are not possible though, because they are nearly impossible on their own, and the angle of the bullet would not allow them.