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    Lab 10

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    Lab 9 Working with Printers Exercise 9.1 Installing a Printer Overview Contoso‚ Ltd. has just taken delivery of several new printers that the IT director purchased through an auction. He has assigned you the task of installing the printers and making them available to the users of the company network. For the first printer‚ you intend to connect the unit directly to an LPT port in the Windows 7 computer that will function as the print server. In Exercise 9.1‚ you install the driver for the printer

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    Foam Lab

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    Lab Report Problem: What method would consistently test the foam and ensure it has the correct density? Background: There are words that need to be understood before executing the experiment. The first thing you need to know is density. Density is a measure of mass per unit of volume. The reason for testing density of doors because doors must contain a density of 14.34lbs per ft3 of foam‚ or it will collapse if the density is too high. If the density is too low‚ it won’t allow for normal expansion

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    Lab Report

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    Lab Report 7: Analysis of Cereal Introduction: The objective of this lab was to consult for the FDA regarding a recently surfaced scandal involving false reporting of iron content in cereal as well as iron tablets. The makers of the cereal and the iron tablets‚ respectively‚ were allegedly reporting higher amounts of iron in their products than actually existed‚ as a way to save money but continue to provide products with “adequate” amounts of iron. The FDA needed consulting in order to analyze

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    Ans Lab Report

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    Nervous System lab was designed to measure reaction times by using a variety of tests that affect the heart rate. These tests were the startle‚ stroop‚ Valsalva maneuver‚ diving reflex‚ and a test of our choice. The test our group chose to measure the heart rate in response to doing a trust fall to anticipate the stress right before the fall. To begin this lab we chose a participant‚ and then hooked their finger up to the pulse transducer sensor. Using the chart 5 program on the lab computer the participant’s

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    Amylase Lab

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    Abstract This lab was focused on determining the optimal temperature of the enzyme amylase responsible for catabolizing starch polymers and to see how different temperatures affected the rate as well as how effectively the enzyme worked. To proceed with the experiment the group set up four different test tubes for each‚ bacteria and fungal amylase‚ and labeled them accordingly with different temperatures as well as different solutions . Then the spot plates were placed on the time and temperature

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    Science Lab

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    sulphate solution Safety: 1. Be careful with copper (II) sulphate solution it is poisonous and corrosive. handle with care 2. Do NOT BREATH in any gases produced 3. If you touch any of the metals‚ you MUST wash your hands at the end of the lab Procedure: 1. Collect the materials and put on safety equipment. 2. Observe the metals and record your observations. 3. Into separate test tubes‚ place each metal inside. Label accordingly to metal. 4. Measure 5mL of the copper (II)

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    Blubber Lab

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    Based on the knowledge I gained from the blubber lab‚ I discovered how homeostasis is maintained by feedback loops in regards to blubber. A negative feedback loop is a process where change is prevented and a certain set point is kept. In this experiment‚ the negative feedback loop was the blubber preventing the changing temperature of the thermometer. Therefore‚ blubber is a method of homeostasis‚ because it prevents the ideal temperature of the thermometer from dropping. Our data shows this as well

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    Clothespin lab

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    Purpose Name Due Date Clothespin Lab / Muscle Fatigue What are the affects of anaerobic respiration on you muscles? Background Normally‚ muscles use oxygen through a process known as cellular/aerobic respiration to make energy (or ATP) from sugar (glucose). This process is very efficient and produces 38 ATPs for each molecule of glucose. Carbon dioxide and water are the results of this reaction. When muscles undergo rigorous exercise they require more oxygen to make ATP than the

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    Pglo Lab

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    Genetic transformation of Escherichia coli with pGLO (Adapted from: Biotechnology Explorer: Bacterial Transformation: The pGLO System. Instructors Guide. BIO-RAD). Objectives a. To understand one of the most commonly used techniques for introducing DNA into E. coli cells and its use in molecular cloning. b. To become familiar with the concept of using green fluorescent protein (GFP) as a molecular tag for studying gene expression in bacteria and other organisms.

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    Starch Lab

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    The experimental membrane we used in this lab acted as a barrier in which only a small number of molecules can pass through. In this experiment we wanted to show the process of osmosis‚ in which water passes through the aforementioned barrier. Osmosis is critical to life because the process regulates

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