Monday, October 24, 2011
Independent Study: Possible Form of Testing
Here is the link to a website that we found that tests reaction time. We will use something similar as part of our testing in our experiment. Reaction Time Test
Friday, October 21, 2011
The history of PowerAde
Click here for some background info on leading sports drink manufacturer PowerAde! @ Powerade Info
Independent Study Intro.
Myself and Brice K. will be conducting a study on how sports drinks affect reaction time! Click Here for Synopsis. I will be blogging and #Tweeting about our findidngs and progress on the topic!
Lab Report: Specific Heat
Ben Lehotay
Mrs. Gordon-Coy
Physics 3
Specific Heat Lab
Introduction:
In this lab the laws and properties of specific heat are being tested. We are using the basic concepts of a calorimeter to try to maintain heat in a copper/water sample. Once thermal equilibrium is reached the study is concluded and data will be compiled. Mass, specific heat and, change in temperature will be highlighted during the course of the experiment.
Hypothesis (Initial)
If heated copper is placed in water inside a homemade calorimeter, the the calorimeter will attain the heat and reach thermal equilibrium around 22.5 C.
Materials:
- LabPro with temperature probe
- Scale/balance w/ digital display
- A dry cup (plastic or Styrofoam
- Metal specimen (Copper or Brass)
- Hot Plate for boiling metal sample
- Room temperature water (Clean as possible)
- Whey Boat
- Home-Made Calorimeter
- Glass beaker
- Pencil and Paper for Data
Methods:
- Locate your calorimeter to be used in experiment
- Gather remaining essential materials
- Heat up hot plate and fill a beaker with water, place on hot plate, and place metal sample in water
- Fill beaker w/ 600 ml of water, weigh if desired for exact measurements, take temperature (1:1 ratio g to ml)
- Pour water into calorimeter
- Extract your metal (copper) sample from boiling water, take temperature
- Carefully weigh your metal sample and place in water inside calorimeter
- Take the temperature of the initial temperature once copper is placed in water
- Take temperature every 2-3 minutes, and record until thermal equilibrium is reached
Results and Observations:
The calorimeter constructed attained heat very well. Once the copper was placed in the water thermal equilibrium was reached quickly (about 7 minutes). I noticed some condensation on the outside of the calorimeter, indicating that it was doing its job
Whey Boat | 2.5g |
Total (Boat and Cu) | 21g (Cu=18.5) |
600 ml of water | 600g |
Water (C) | 21 |
Copper (C) | 24.4 |
Start once Combined (C) | 21.4 |
Final Equilibrium (C) | 22.1 |
Time took to reach T.E. | 7 min |
Conclusions and Error Analysis:
- Used the 1:1 ratio of g:ml, promoting that mass of water may not have been exact
- Timing was off by about 15-20 seconds
- LabPro was acting erratic and “buggy”
- All our measurements may have been affected by error in some manner
I thought we did a good job of keeping everything neat and organized in the experiment. Mainly just general error affected the outcome potentially. Human error and mechanical error was accounted for.
I conclude that our hypothesis was accepted because the calorimeter we constructed did attain the heat at the approximated amount.
Final Thoughts:
This was our first lab of the year in Physics. I though it ran really smoothly and was well organized. Good was to apply the concepts we are learning to the real world, and I learned a lot!
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