Name of Lab:Lab 1-Measurements, Scientific Method / Date Completed:
Directions:
- Fill in the following fields as completely and accurately as possible. Please be sure to practice appropriate grammar, punctuation, and spelling.
- When finished, save your document with a file name that includes your name, section number, and the assignment (i.e. RoyMason_Lab1_Sect1234.doc). Please only send .doc or .rtf files. Work submitted in any other format will not be graded.
- Email your completed form to the TA, Dande Tucker, at before midnight on the day it is due. Late work will not be accepted.
Part 1—Height : Weight Ratio
- Fill in the following chart:
Height (in cm) / Weight (in kg) / Height ÷ Weight (Actual) / Height ÷ Weight (Expected)
4 cm/kg
- Answer the following questions:
Is height in centimeters equal to four times weight in kilograms? Did you support or refute the hypothesis?
Part 2—Arm Length : Height
- Fill in the following chart:
Height (cm) / Arm Length Expected (cm)
(Height (cm) x 0.4) / Actual Arm Length (cm) / Deviation from expected
(Actual – Expected)
- Answer the following questions:
Describe your procedures for taking the arm length measurement. Is there a standard for measuring arm length? Why is it important, in scientific terms, to have measurements like these standardized?
Did you support or refute the hypothesis that arm length in centimeters is .4 of his height in centimeters? Do you think any of your online classmates found the alternate result? Why or why not?
Part 3—Hand Temperature
What factors do you think might affect a person’s hand temperature?What is your hypothesis about hand temperature?
Answer the following questions:
1. Lead melts at 620ºF. Would a furnace that heats to 200ºC melt the lead? Why or Why not?2. Albert Einstein loved ice cream! Would he rather have 1 kg of Rocky Road of 10,000 mg? Express both in grams.
3. How does a hypothesis differ from a theory? How does a theory in common culture differ from a theory in science?
4. What makes a good hypothesis?
Fill in the following charts:
5.
Item / Length in Meters / Length in CentimetersYour textbook
Your dining or coffee table
6.
Item / Mass in Grams / Mass in KilogramsYou!
7.
Item / Temp in ºC / Temp in ºFBody Temperature
8. Place the decimal point in its correct place for the following statements:
Susan is 13525 cm tall. / Susan is cm tall.A soda bottle contains59.14 liters of fluid. / A soda bottle contains liters of fluid.
The speedy driver passed us at 16.10 km per hour. / The speedy driver passed us at km per hour.