How To Write A Lab Report 1
How To Write A Lab Report 1
N. If you are reporting a result (with un-
certainty) whose magnitude requires the use of scientific notation, report both numbers written
with the same exponent: (1.10 0.06) 10
6
meters, not 1.10 10
6
6.2 10
8
meters. Com-
paring the precision of your uncertainty to your result is much simpler with the preferred format.
This might be a good place to point at that uncertainty analysis or error analysis does not
mean, Explain what went wrong and how you'd do it differently next time. Certainly, if in ana-
lyzing your data you realize that you carried out some part of the procedure in a way that gave
poorer results than you had expected, and you dont have the time do redo that part of the experi-
ment, you should say so: thinking carefully about your procedure after you've done the experiment
is an important part of improving your experimental technique, and can be critical for eliminating
systematic errors from your results. The term uncertainty analysis, however, refers to the quan-
titative estimation of the experimental uncertainty in your numerical results.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 6 3
8.5.4 Results
Earlier we said that you should not give tables of your raw data in your analysis section (or
anywhere else). There are occasions, however, when reporting processed results in tabular form
is appropriate, when a graph is difficult or meaningless. Suppose, for example, that you repeated
the collisions experiment in a number of different ways (using magnetic pucks that repel each oth-
er, using velcro to make the pucks stick together, using pucks with varying masses), and generate
from class data the mean ratio of the total momentum magnitude after the collision to that before the
collision in each case (and its uncertainty). In this case, there is no independent variable to plot
these results against, so a tabular display of these processed results would be appropriate.
At some point you will draw some conclusions about whether the data you have obtained are
consistent with the expected relationship between your variables. If you predicted a straight line in
your theory section and your experimental results support your prediction, you should say so. You
should, however, avoid comments like, Our results prove that the theory is correct. You can
never prove a theory; to do so, you would have to perform all possible experimental tests of that
theory, and you dont have time for that in a three-hour lab period. On the other hand, it is possible
to disprove a theory with a single contradictory measurement (provided that the experiment has
been done correctly, which may be a matter of debate!). The accepted phrase in both cases is less
rashly assertive: "Our results are consistent (or inconsistent) with the theory.
Often your discussion of the implications of your results will be straightforward; if you're
working with a well-known physical system and you follow the treatment in a textbook to develop
a theory, your results will be probably consistent with the theory. We have tried to slip in a few
curve balls just to keep the lab from being verify what's in the book, though. Your discussion of
the implications of unexpected results will show your strength as a physicist most clearly. You
should be creative, but also very careful. Don't allow yourself to indulge in empty speculation
about an unexpected result; test your speculations. If you come up with an explanation, try to
show that it could indeed have caused an effect of the same magnitude and in the same direction as
the effect you observed. That is, if your explanation predicts a greater-than-expected measurement,
you'd better observe a greater-than-expected measurement if your explanation is to be valid.
8.5.5 Checklist for an Analysis Section
Your analysis section should
Briefly describes the data
Include a Cartesian (unlinearized) graph of data
Includes linearized graphs of data, if appropriate
Discusses consistency or lack thereof with any theoretical predictions
Discusses how you calculated the slope and intercept of any linear graphs
Shows the calculation any derived quantities from slope or intercept
Completely discusses all uncertainties involved, showing sample calculations if needed
Discusses the results and their implications
8.6 PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
8.6.1 Proofreading
In principle, if you write the various sections of your report using the guidelines above, you
should be done. Before you turn in that masterpiece of scientific prose, though, you need to make
sure that it all hangs together. That is, do the links between sections that you imply in one section
actually appear in another? For example, did you test in your analysis section the equation that you
8. How to Write a Lab Report 6 4
derived in your theory section? If you made assumptions in your theory section, did you include
tests of those assumptions in your procedure section? Did the measurements you describe in the
procedure appear as graphs in analysis? Do your quantitative results support your discussion and
your conclusions? Is it clear that your theory and your procedure are about the same experiment?
You should really read your report over twice. The first time through is for proofreading, a
step we find people often omit. That word-processed output from the laser printer may look won-
derful at first glance, but it has to stand up to a careful reading. Remember, the computer may not
going to catch your mistakes in punctuation, and the spelling checker will probably not distinguish
between there and their, or its and its. (Now is a good time for you to make sure that you
know the difference between its and its.) It also wont notice that youve left out the equations.
(Indeed, using a spelling checker with technical writing can be pretty annoying, as it chokes on
every technical word, symbol, and equation number.) Our experience with grammar checkers sug-
gests that they are not up to college-level English, so don't slavishly follow every instruction your
grammar checker makes, either. We're not suggesting that you turn your backs on some benefits
of modern computer technology and not use your spelling and grammar checkers at all, but you
should recognize that they have their limitations.
The second reading is for sense and continuity. Do the steps of your procedure follow each
other logically? Is the same true for your analysis? Do the sections of your report relate to each oth-
er as described above? If you can stand it, and if you can get yourself to write your report well
ahead of time (a good intention with which the road to hell is no doubt liberally strewn), get some-
one else (preferably not your lab partner) to read your report. The lab assistants will be prepared to
read over your reports for just such considerations as we've described above.
8.6.2 More on Good Writing Style
The mechanics of your presentation are arguably its least important aspect. Nevertheless, a
sloppy presentation can add to your readers difficulty in getting through your report, and hence
lower your credibility. (If you didnt care enough about your report to run it through your spelling
checker, how much effort could you have gone to on the parts that needed some real work?) You
are presumably already familiar with the need for correct spelling and punctuation; here are some
mechanics of presentation that may be less familiar.
Set apart the different sections of your report (abstract, introduction, etc.) with blank lines.
Avoid breaking a section between the heading and the first paragraph; that is, dont leave a
section heading dangling at the bottom of a page with the text of the section beginning at the
top of the next page.
You will be expected to write good, clear, English in your lab reports, using correct grammar
in complete sentences. The days when someone in a science course could wail, But this is a phys-
ics course, not an English course! are, thanks to the concept of writing across the curriculum,
long gone (if in fact they ever existed at classy liberal-arts colleges like Pomona). Remember that
the point of any report is communicating with someone else. If you keep distracting your readers
with grammatical mistakes or unclear prose, you will make it difficult for them to concentrate on
the meaning. You will be graded partially on the quality and clarity of your writing. As a general
guide to a good prose style, we recommend Strunk and White's The Elements of Style. It is a
small paperback, usually available at the bookstore. We think it will be a useful investment for
several of your classes. Also keep handy your copy of Hacker, A Writers Reference from your
ID 1 course; the lab staffers are likely to refer to it when pointing out grammatical mistakes.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 6 5
In spite of what Strunk and White say, however, you should use inclusive pronouns rather
than the generic he. That is, you should use constructions like, When physicists make measure-
ments, they ... rather than, When a physicist makes a measurement, he ... Strunk and White
wrote their book before inclusive language became standard. It's almost the 21st century now,
usage changes, and it's time to get with it. (You might also count the members of the lab teaching
staff who are left out by the generic he and think of inclusive language as simple self-defense.)
You should also avoid certain words and expressions. Readings (as in, We took five
readings for each distance) belongs on Star Trek,where it's used to avoid using the technical ter-
minology that a 23rd-century scientist would use, since the screenwriters don't have any idea what
that terminology might be. Youre using 20th-century equipment and a 20th-century vocabulary,
and you can describe exactly what youre measuring: For each distance between the source and
the timer, we measured the time interval for the sound wave to travel that distance five times.
Other words and phrases that people often use incorrectly are:
Defined as, in the sense of found to be or may be described empirically by. You can
define the length of a pendulum as the distance from the pivot to the center of mass of the
bob, if that is the correct definition, but you find or measure it to be 1 meter long.
Calculated value, in the sense of number we calculated from our measurements. Usu-
ally the calculated value (or the theoretical value) is one you derive from some theoretical
calculation, and the measured value (or the experimentally-determined value) is the one
you calculate from your measurements.
Approximate for estimate (as a verb). Estimates (as nouns) usually are approximations,
in the sense that you typically know them to one significant figure. But you estimate a
number (that is the process), and end up with an approximation (or better, estimate [noun])
of its value.
Correlation for simple relation. Saying that two quantities are correlated only means
that they seem to be related in some way, so that if one changes, the other one changes as
well. The relationship between variables in many disciplines of natural and social science can
be extremely complicated, and although we often assume that some underlying cause is re-
sponsible for the relationship, this is often not the case: correlation does not imply causa-
tion. In physics, however, the variables that we generally will look at will be clearly related
by some simple relation. Saying that two quantities are correlated in physics is usually too
weak a statement: describe the relationship.
Calibration. People really like this term, because it sounds so technical. It refers specifi-
cally to the comparison of one measuring instrument either against another or some reference
standard, to make sure the instrument is working correctly. If this is not what you're doing
(and you rarely will do this in this lab program), you are not calibrating.
Prove meaning support. We talked about this already, but it's worth repeating. You can't
prove a theory with one experiment, although you can disprove a theory with one. Results
can only support or be consistent with a theory.
Correct value in the sense of a value published in a book. In some experiments, you
might be measuring a value (like the speed of sound) whose value we can look up in a refer-
ence, and you may be tempted to call the value in the book the correct value. It is not the
correct value: it is the (currently) accepted value. The values of physical constants published
in books are summaries of experimental results, and new experiments can (and often do) lead
to modifications in these accepted values.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 6 6
An episode from the history of optics illustrates the last point. Albert Michelson (1852-1931)
was the first American to win the Nobel prize in physics, for his precision measurements in the
field of optics. He invented the Michelson interferometer, used in the famous Michelson-Morley
experiment to demonstrate (unexpectedly!) that the speed of light is the same in all inertial reference
frames. He also made several measurements of the speed of light using a method very similar to
the one you will use later on this semester, although with considerably longer baselines. (One of
his measurements was made between Mt. Wilson and Mount Baldy [no lie!], and Baseline Road in
northern Claremont was surveyed accurately as part of this measurement.) His last measurement,
made in an evacuated tunnel about a mile long (on what was then the Irvine Ranch) was accepted
as the standard for decades, and probably most physicists thought of his result as the correct
one. A 1941 review of fundamental physical constants (R.T. Birge, The General Physical
Constants, in Reports in Modern Physics, 8, 90, 1941) weights this result the most heavily in
coming up with a weighted average of several contemporary measurements of the speed of light.
You can guess what's coming. Later measurements, mostly made in the 1950s, consistently
got results that disagreed with Michelson's. The disagreement wasn't very large, about 17 km/s
(out of 300,000 km/s). Their result and Michelson's differed by more than the sum of the experi-
mental uncertainties, though. Eventually a partial explanation for the discrepancy surfaced. Michel-
son died shortly before the experiment was actually performed, although he did see the apparatus
installed. His collaborators made the measurements (almost 3,000 altogether) at night, to reduce
temperature variations and human activity in the area as sources of experimental uncertainty. The
baseline distance was measured during the day, though, and only two or three times. (Its difficult
to survey distances of more than a few tens of meters at night.) Apparently the thermal expansion
and contraction of the ground itself with temperature was large enough to have a systematic effect
on the speed of light they deduced from their measurements.
Lest Michelsons collaborators seem inept, we should mention that they were quite alert to
some even more obscure possible sources of systematic error. In reporting their results, they men-
tioned an apparent weak dependence of the measured speed of light on the tides, but since they
couldnt identify the cause of this dependence, they couldnt figure out how to correct for it, or
even whether they should! The cause of this systematic effect is unclear even now. Michelsons
collaborators and the authors of the review article from which most of this historical summary is
taken, mindful that correlation doesnt imply causation, all hesitated to claim that the tides were
directly responsible for the apparent variation in the measured speed of light. (For more details, see
E.R. Cohen and J.W.M. DuMond, Fundamental Constants in 1965, Reviews of Modern
Physics, 37, 537, 1965, and the references therein.)
The moral of this tale, of course, is that there are no correct results in science, only accept-
ed ones. Even prominent scientists forget sources of systematic error, or run into systematic error
where do one would have expected it, or someone comes along with better equipment. It is true
that you're not likely to hit the frontiers of physics in an introductory laboratory, but you should
get into the habit now of regarding every scientific result as only one carefully designed experiment
away from revision.
8.6.3 How Long Should a Lab Report Be? (and Stuff to Leave Out)
A typical scientific journal article might be about ten pages long. Your full lab reports will
probably be shorter; try to limit yourself to the equivalent of four or five single-spaced typewritten
pages of text, not counting graphs or diagrams. This means that few of the five major sections (the
ones with Roman numerals on the outline) will exceed a page in length, and some may be shorter.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 6 7
There are also some items you should leave out of a lab report. Please don't complain about
the equipment; we already know that if we had an infinite budget, we could buy really frictionless
gliders and opto-electronic timers good to a microsecond. You won't have an infinite budget in real
life, either. Even if your equipment budget is large, you will always be making measurements that
require care and ingenuity to make; sometimes the equipment you would like doesn't even exist!
Experimental physics isn't about making really precise measurements so much as it is about mak-
ing the best measurements you can with the equipment you have. By practicing with the admittedly
limited equipment available now, you prepare yourself for those later measurements when you
can't improve the data simply by spending more money.
Don't editorialize about an experiment being a success or failure in the context of agree-
ment with accepted results or theories. Its true that we have some expectation that your results will
be in agreement with established laws of physics, because normally you wont be dealing with
particularly exotic (that is, poorly understood) physics in an introductory course. We also expect
that in the full report, in which you do write a draft for which you have presumably analyzed your
data, that if your results are in gross disagreement with established laws of physics, that you will
make some attempt to figure out the cause of that disagreement and fix it. You do, after all, have
most of that second lab period to collect more data if that should seem appropriate, and thats ex-
actly why we arranged the lab schedule the way we did. In evaluating your work, though, we look
primarily for evidence that you understood how the equipment worked, how the measurements
you made were related to the theory discussed, and generally that you were thinking about what
you were doing. Some real physical effect could be present that the designers of the lab over-
looked, or have left in to keep you on your toes. (This happens more often than you might think.)
If you have been careful about your work, be confident in presenting what you have observed.
(The confidence should follow from being careful, though, and if the lab staff identify some sys-
tematic effect in data collection that you overlooked, go take more data!)
8.6.4 Example Lab Reports
Two sample lab reports are provided as appendices to this chapter. Each is mostly well-writ-
ten, but has problems with specific sections, as discussed in the exercises below. Except for these
problem sections, though, you can use these reports as examples of good report style.
Note again that a summary of all checklists appears on the inside front cover of this manual.
EXERCI SES
Exercise 8.1
Read the lab report entitled The Speed of Sound. This report (which describes an older ver-
sion of the experiment you did during the first week of lab) is mostly well-written except for
the abstract and procedure sections. See what you think is lacking in these sections (according
to the checklists and other information in this chapter) and then compare with the comments on
the last page of this chapter. (There is no penalty for not spotting everything: just do the best
that you can.) Write your comments on the report itself.
Exercise 8.2
Read the lab report entitled Gravitational Potential Energy. This report is mostly well-written
except for except for the analysis section (where little superscripted numbers indicate problem
areas). See if you can figure out what these numbered problems are, and then check the an-
swers provided on the last page of the chapter. (There is no penalty for not getting everything
just right: just do the best that you can.) Write your guesses in the margin of the report itself.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 6 8
APPENDIX 8.1: FIRST SAMPLE LAB REPORT
Torrin Hultgren
Partner: Alix Hui
9/10/98
The Speed of Sound
Abstract:
In this lab we determined the speed of sound by timing the interval that it took for a loud
bang to echo off a surface a known distance away. Our average time interval was 1.28 s, and the
distance was 440 m, so our calculated value for the speed of sound was 343.8 m/s. This is con-
sistent within our experimental uncertainty with the accepted value at 30C, which is 349.7 m/s.
Introduction:
The speed of sound has many practical applications, such as determining the distance from
lightning, knowing when jets will break the sound barrier, designing acoustical facilities like con-
cert halls and auditoriums, and literally thousands of others. The phenomenon of an echo is famil-
iar to most people, and it is a relatively easy way to measure the speed of sound.
We used two blocks of wood to create a loud and sharp bang. We determined the distance
using a counting wheel whose circumference we measured and we used hand stopwatches to time
the echo. We repeated the time measurement 20 times to reduce experimental uncertainty. We cal-
culated the speed of sound by dividing the distance measurement by the time measurement. In ad-
dition, because the speed of sound varies with the temperature of the air through which it propa-
gates, we measured the temperature with a mercury thermometer in order to calculate the accepted
value for the speed of sound.
Procedure:
We used the following pieces of equipment to do the lab.
Two small blocks of wood
2 stopwatches
1 measuring wheel
1 meter stick
Thermometer
A small piece of masking tape
We set up on the concrete bench closest to the grass on Marston Quad. We chose this spot
because it lined up with the small wall at the end of Stover Walk (which we could see through the
trees) which gave us an easy reference point for beginning our distance measurement. One of us
held the stopwatch and the other hit the blocks together. Because we could see the blocks coming
together we could anticipate when they would hit. Then we stopped the stopwatch when we heard
the echo, without anticipating it. This gave us a slight delay in timing the echo because of our reac-
tion time, but we were able to correct for this as described below. Both of us made 10 time meas-
urements and hit the blocks together 10 times.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 6 9
To account for the reaction time delay we devised this procedure. I started both stopwatches
at the same time. I then handed one stopwatch to Alix and kept the other. Behind my back she si-
multaneously stopped her stopwatch and hit one of the blocks against the concrete bench. When I
heard the sound I stopped my stopwatch. The difference between the two times on the stopwatches
was my reaction time. We repeated this measurement for each of us five times.
To calibrate the measuring wheel we put a small piece of tape at the edge of the wheel. We
put the meter stick on the ground and lined this piece of tape up with one of the ends of the meter
stick. We then rolled the measuring wheel along the ground next to the meter stick until the piece
of tape had traveled one full revolution. The point that it lined up with was our value for the cir-
cumference of the wheel.
For the distance measurement we began at the wall at the beginning of Stover Walk that lined
up with the place where we had taken our time measurements. We walked the measuring wheel
down the middle of Stover Walk, using the sidewalk lines to make sure we were traveling in a
straight line and not zigzagging excessively. We continued across the street, and then used the
sidewalk lines to line up perpendicularly so we could move over and roll the measuring wheel
across the wood chips and right up to the face of Carnegie that we believed the sound was echoing
off of. We then doubled this measurement to arrive at the total distance the sound had traveled.
Analysis:
The average of the measurements I took was 1.55 s, with a standard deviation of s = 0.05 s.
The uncertainty of this measurement, using the Student t-value, is
st = 0.05 s 2.09 = 0.10 s (1)
This measurement therefore had a fractional uncertainty of
0.10 s
1.55 s
= = 0 064 6 4 . . % (2)
The similar values for Alixs measurements, which were different because she had a different reac-
tion time, were 1.43 s 0.13 s for a fractional uncertainty of 9.1%. Both of these fractional uncer-
tainties seem reasonable for the type of measurements we were doing. My average reaction time
was 0.27 s 0.02 s, and her average reaction time was 0.20 s 0.03 s. Our actual calculated
times of flight were therefore 1.28 s 0.082 s and 1.23 s 0.11 s.
Our measurement for the circumference of the wheel was 0.587 m. Our measurement for the
number of rotations of the wheel was 374.3. The distance from us to Carnegie was therefore
374 3 220 . turns 0.587
m
turn
m = (3)
Doubling this we arrived at a total distance of flight measurement of 440 m. We generously esti-
mated our uncertainty to be 1.0m. This gives us a fractional uncertainty for the distance meas-
urement of 0.2%. Compared to the uncertainty of the time measurement, this is tiny.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 7 0
My calculated value for the speed of sound was
440
344
m
1.28 s
m/s = (4)
Propagating uncertainty using the weakest-link rule, my calculated uncertainty was 22 m/s.
Alix's value was 355 m/s 32 m/s.
The formula for the speed of sound as it varies with temperature is
v
s
T = +
331 3 0 6 . .
m
s
m
s C
(5)
where T is measured in Celsius degrees. Our measured value for the temperature was 30C. Plug-
ging this into the above formula gives us an accepted value for the speed of sound of 349.3 m/s.
This value lies well within both of our experimental uncertainties.
Conclusion:
We measured the time it took for an echo to travel a measurable distance. Using our separate time
and mutual distance measurements we calculated two values for the speed of sound: my result was
344 m/s 22 m/s and Alixs was 355 m/s 32 m/s. These values for the uncertainty are a reason-
able fractional amount. Our calculated accepted value for the speed of sound based on the observed
temperature was 349.3 m/s. This value lies well within the experimental uncertainty of both our
measurements.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 7 1
COMMENTS ON THIS REPORT:
Short sections:
These are fairly good, except that the abstract should include an estimate of the uncertainty in
their measurement of the speed of sound, not just their measured value. The introduction should
provide a clearer statement of the particular experimental question to be resolved here (that is, that
the goal of the experiment is to measure the speed of sound by measuring the round-trip time of an
echo from a distant object and compare the result with an accepted formula for the speed of sound).
Theory:
The Theory section is missing! This is obviously a simple experiment based on very simple
theory, but at the very least the author should state explicitly that he is assuming that the speed of
sound is constant, and give the appropriate equation for finding the speed from distance and time
measurements.
Procedure:
The equipment list does not include their stopwatch number or the number of the measuring
wheel. Consequently, if they needed to check their calibration of the wheel (or the accuracy of the
stopwatch, which is less likely), they would have no way of identifying it.
The procedure section does provide an equipment list but not a sketch or diagram. However,
this lab is a case where an equipment list is probably more useful than a sketch for helping the
reader understand how the lab works. Even though the guidelines strongly suggest that one should
include a diagram, the guidelines should not be followed slavishly if a diagram does not really add
much to the readers understanding. Do whatever makes things most clear to the reader!
It might have been nice to briefly discuss that the author is assuming that the actual flight
time of the echo that he will use to calculate the speed of sound is his measured flight time of the
sound minus his reaction time. This is implicit but should be stated more explicitly.
The calibration of the measuring wheel needs more discussion. For example, the piece of
tape mentioned presumably has a finite width, probably about 1 cm. If they werent careful to
identify a particular reference point on the tape (such as a penmark on the tape, or one of the two
edges), this would introduce a systematic error into their calibration, which would carry over into a
systematic error in their value for the distance.
The author also doesnt state the precision of their measurement of the circumference of the
measuring wheel. Without this, the reader has no way of knowing if the later estimate in the uncer-
tainty of the distance is reasonable. It is also unclear if they repeated the circumference measure-
ment or the distance measurement.
Analysis:
The main problem with this section is the uncertainty analysis. To begin with, the author
mentions combining the uncertainties of their average time measurements for the echo time and the
reaction time, but does not identify the method used to combine the uncertainties. Next, no uncer-
tainty estimates are given for either the measurement of the wheels circumference or the number of
revolutions of the wheel. Finally, the author invokes the weakest-link rule in finding the uncertain-
ty in the final value for the speed of sound, but does not justify the use of the weakest-link rule by
explicitly locating the weakest link in the calculation and then showing a sample calculation using
that weakest link.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 7 2
APPENDIX 8.2: SECOND SAMPLE LAB REPORT
GRAVITATIONAL POTENTIAL ENERGY
Maria Goeppert-Meyer
(Lab partner: Irene Curie)
Sept. 26, 1995
ABSTRACT
In this experiment, we determined the change in the gravitational potential energy V of the
system consisting of the earth and a dropped plastic slab as a function of the distance h through
which the slab falls. We found this change in potential energy to be consistent with the expression
V V mgh
i f
= , where m is the mass of the object and g is the gravitational field strength. We
found the value of g to be 9.81 0.02 m/s
2
, consistent with results obtained in other laboratories.
INTRODUCTION
Consider the change V V
i f
- of the gravitational potential energy of a system consisting of
the earth and a falling object, where V
i
is the systems initial potential energy, V
f
is its final poten-
tial energy after the object has fallen a certain distance h. In section C7.4, the text claims that this
change in potential energy is given by V V
i f
- = mgh, where m is the objects mass and g is the
gravitational field strength near the earth, a constant that is purportedly equal to 9.8 m/s
2
.
This result, which is stated without justification in the text, is a basic and important result that
subsequently used many times in the text. It would be valuable, therefore, to supply the empirical
foundation for this assertion. Our goals in this experiment were to demonstrate for a specific object
interacting with the earth that (1) for a given value of h, the value of V V
i f
- does appear to be pro-
portional to m, (2) for a given value of m, the value V V
i f
- increases linearly with h, and (3) the
value of g is what it is purported to be.
In this particular experiment we dropped a plastic slab (released from rest at a known initial
height) past a photodetector connected to a computer. A series of equally-spaced opaque bands
painted on the slab interrupted the light falling on the photodetector, and the computer measured the
time that it took each band to pass the photodetector. From this information, we could determine
slabs speed as each band passed the photodetector, and thus determine its kinetic energy after it
had fallen whatever distance h was required to bring that particular band past the photodetector.
Given the objects kinetic energy as a function of h, we could find V V
i f
- as a function of h. By
attaching various weights to the bottom of the slab, we could vary the mass of the falling object
and thus check how V V
i f
- depends on mass.
THEORY
As the plastic slab drops under the influence of the gravitational interaction between it and the
earth, the total energy of the earth-slab system must be conserved:
K
i
+ K
E,i
+ V
i
= K
f
+ K
E,f
+ V
f
(1)
where K
i
and K
f
are the initial and final kinetic energies of the slab, K
E,i
and K
E,f
are the initial and
final kinetic energies of the earth, and V
i
and V
f
are the initial and final gravitational potential ener-
gies of the system. According to the argument presented in section C7.3 of the text, we can con-
8. How to Write a Lab Report 7 3
sider the earth to be essentially at rest throughout the experiment (since it is so much more massive
than the slab) and thus K
E,i
and K
E,f
are negligible. If we drop the slab from rest, then K
i
= 0 also,
and equation (1) becomes simply
V V
i f
- = K
f
=
1
2
2
m
f
v (2)
So, to measure the systems potential energy change V V
i f
- after the slab has fallen a dis-
tance h, all that we have to is measure the slabs mass m and its final speed
v
f
. We can easily
measure its mass using a balance. We can measure its final speed as follows. Imagine that we paint
an opaque band across the width of the slab perpendicular to the direction that the slab falls. As the
slab falls, imagine that this band interrupts a horizontal beam of light between a light source and a
detector. We can use a computer to register the time Dt that the beam is interrupted. If the height of
the band is Dd, then the speed of the slab as the band crosses the beam is approximately given by:
v Dd/Dt (3)
This most closely approximates the slabs speed halfway through the time interval and thus rough-
ly as the center of the band passes the light beam. This speed, therefore, can be used to determine
the slabs kinetic energy after it has fallen a distance h equal to the change in the slabs position
from its release point to the position where the band is centered on the photocell beam.
Finally, note that the claim is that V V
i f
- = mgh, where m is the slabs mass and g is the
constant gravitational field strength. If this is true, then plugging this into equation (2) yields
mgh =
1
2
2
m
f
v gh =
1
2
2
v
f
(4)
Therefore, if V V
i f
- is proportional to m as claimed, the slabs final speed after falling through a
given distance h should be completely independent of its mass, which should be easy to check.
Also, if this is true, the slabs mass is not really relevant and we do not need to measure it.
PROCEDURE
In this experiment, our falling object was a clear plastic slab about 1.1 m tall and 8 cm wide,
with five opaque bands 5.0 cm tall and vertically separated (center to center) by 20 cm. We could
vary the mass of the slab by attaching one to four weights to the bottom of the slab. We dropped
this slab past a photogate consisting of a paired infrared light source and a photodetector mounted
on a lab table so that the line connecting the source and detector was horizontal (perpendicular to
the motion of the slab). The output of the photodetector was connected to a small box which in turn
was connected to a Universal Lab Interface (ULI) circuit board (sold by Vernier Software, Inc.),
which processed the signal for the photogate before passing it on to a Macintosh Centris 610 (serial
number 3255967). A program called ULI Timer (also from Vernier Software) monitored the out-
put from the ULI and displayed time intervals on the computer screen (see Figure 1 for a sketch of
our experimental setup.) The program was configured to display the length of time that each of the
five dark bands on the slab blocked the photogate beam as the slab fell past it.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 7 4
floor
receptacle for
catching the slab
slab
photogate
(attached to
the desk with
a clamp)
table
connector box
ULI
Macintosh
FRONT VIEW
20 cm
20 cm
20 cm
20 cm
20 cm
5 cm
mark
holes for attach-
ing weights
CLOSE-UP and SIDE
VIEW of the slab:
Figure 1: Sketch of the apparatus
After our lab instructor gave a brief demonstration of the equipment, each of the seven lab
teams in our particular afternoon session did a run. When our turn came, one of us (M-G.M.) held
the center of the upper end of the slab between his thumb and forefinger and adjusted its vertical
position until a certain mark inscribed on the slab edge was aligned precisely in the middle of the
photogate as reported by IC. We waited until the slab had stopped swinging back and forth and
was completely at rest. I.C. then triggered the ULI Timer program to start taking data and M-G.M.
dropped the slab. The computer then automatically recorded and displayed the time Dt that it took
each of the five opaque bands to pass the photogate. We wrote these five numbers on the black-
board, filling in a table already started by other teams.
Once all the data was taken, each pair of lab partners calculated the means and uncertainties
of the mean (using the techniques in chapters 3 and 5 of the lab reference manual) of the results for
Dt for each of the five bands. We discussed the results as a class and decided that these results ap-
peared to be uncertain by very roughly 0.002 s.
While we were calculating the means and uncertainties, our pair of partners took turns doing
a total of seven more runs, three runs with two weights attached to the slab and four runs with four
weights attached to the slab. These runs were also recorded on the blackboard.
Finally, each pair worked individually to analyze the data. As we did this, we passed the slab
from pair to pair so that each could check that the opaque bands were 5.0 cm tall and separated
from center to center by 20 cm. We did this using an ordinary meter stick turned on its edge so that
the scale was right next to and perpendicular to the bands. We estimated that the height of the
bands was equal to 5.0 cm to within 0.05 cm and that the distances between the centers of the
band was 20.0 cm to within 0.1 cm (we actually measured these from bottom edge to bottom
edge).
8. How to Write a Lab Report 7 5
ANALYSIS
A table of the mean values of the time intervals appears below:
1
Band Number
Dt
(no added weight)
2
Dt
(one added weights)
2
Dt
(four added weights)
2
1
2
3
4
5
0.0252
0.0179
0.0146
0.0126
0.0112
0.0250
0.0181
0.0149
0.0124
0.0113
0.0256
0.0179
0.0144
0.0126
0.0110
It is clear from these results that the speed of the slab is independent of its mass
3
, so (as we argued
in the theory section) V V
i f
- must be
4
directly proportional to the slabs mass m.
From the values of Dt for the slab with no added weight, we calculated
1
2
2
v
f
for each of the
heights
5
. Figure 2 shows a graph of these results. According to LinReg,
6
the slope of the line is
9.81023 and the intercept is 0.012865.
7
This proves
8
that V V
i f
- = mgh (though our value of g is
a bit high due to experimental error).
9
CONCLUSION
In this experiment, we showed that the final kinetic energy per unit mass
1
2
2
v
f
of a plastic
slab dropped from rest through a distance h is independent of the mass of the slab and seems to be
proportional to h (within experimental uncertainty), with the constant of proportionality being equal
to 9.81 0.03 m/s
2
. These results are completely consistent with the assertion made in the text
that V V
i f
- = mgh, where g = 9.8 m/s
2
.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 7 6
0.20 0.40 0.60 0.80 1.00
0
0
2.0
4.0
6.0
8.0
10.0
Figure 2.
10
8. How to Write a Lab Report 7 7
COMMENTS ON THE ANALYSIS SECTION
In general, the problem with this section is that it is far too short and thus does not provide us
with some information that we need to understand the results and how the authors analyzed them.
There are also several statements made that are not or cannot be supported by the data.
Here are specific comments about the places in the analysis section where specific errors
were flagged with numerical superscripts. (The simulated errors in this report reflect the most
common types of errors that people make when writing analysis sections.)
(1) This table is nicely laid out, but a table of processed data like this should state the units of the
quantities and state the uncertainties of the means as well as the means themselves. The writers
should have also included a description of how many measurements went into calculating the mean
and how the uncertainties were calculated. Also, if the uncertainties are really on the order of
0.002 s (as stated in the procedure section), then the last digit in the tabulated data is totally mean-
ingless. Are the uncertainties really more like 0.0002 s (this would be consistent with the varia-
tion appearing in the table data)?
(2) One could include the units of the data in the column heading like this: Dt in seconds.
(3) Is this really clear? Without knowing the uncertainties, the small variations in the values are
impossible to interpret.
(4) We really cant say that V V
i f
- must be independent of m, only that our data is consistent
with this interpretation.
(5) This needs to be explained in much more depth. How did the writers calculate
1
2
2
v
f
from this
data? What are the uncertainties of these speeds, and how were they calculated (one has to use
something like the weakest link rule)? How were the heights determined and their uncertainties es-
timated? It would have also helped greatly if the writers had listed the calculated values and uncer-
tainties for
1
2
2
v
f
and h for each row of the table (or better yet, on a separate table).
(6) A brief description of LinReg and what it does would be appropriate here.
(7) The quantities quoted here have units and uncertainties: what are they? Also what is the signif-
icance or meaning of the slope and the intercept here?
(8) An experiment can never prove that any theoretical assertion is true. The best that we can say
here is that our results are consistent (or inconsistent) with this assertion. See the conclusion for
better language.
(9) How is g is related to something we have calculated in this lab? Also, the value is a bit high
compared to what? Saying that the difference is due to experimental error says nothing. What
kind of experimental error? Is the result within our uncertainties or not? If so, what does it mean to
say that this is a bit high?
(10) What are the experimental uncertainties of the data points? Are they not shown because they
are too small to appear on the graph or did the writers simply forget about them them? What is be-
ing plotted against what here? (The axes should be labeled.) What is this graph about? (It should
have a title!) What are the units of quantities displayed? What does the line mean? This graph is
missing many of the features that a higher-level graph should have.
8. How to Write a Lab Report 7 8