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Saturday, February 19, 2011


Right before the break, I started this lab with Jan and Brin. Jan was sick but Brin and I managed to complete the test before break. I did the full writeup during break, but as of writing I don't have my groupmates' work. SO here is my completed lab:


Adrian, Brin and Jan
Due Feb. 21, 2011
Locked vs. Free Seismogram Paper in a Custom Seismograph

I.  GUIDING QUESTION: When creating a custom seismograph, is it better to have the paper that the seismogram will be recorded onto locked into place while the ground below it moves, or is it better to have the paper loose and being dragged forward slowly?

II.HYPOTHESIS:  
Adrian’s Hypothesis: I think that it is better to have the paper locked into place on a moving platform, because if the paper was lose, it might resist the moving platform’s movement because of inertia and inaccurately record the moving platform’s movement.
Brin’s hypothesis:
Jan’s hypothesis:

III.  Exploration:
         Materials
  1. Marker.
  2. Many blank papers.
  3. String.
  4. Around 5 one Meter Sticks.
  5. Masking tape.
  6. Rubber bands.
  7. About 15 Large metal washers that will be used as weights.
  8. Scotch tape.
  9. A large table
  10. A cabinet or piece of furniture adjacent to the large table that isn’t connected to the large table and doesn’t move easily.



         Procedure
  1. Sturdily tape or rubber band together 4 one meter sticks.
  2. Stand this contraption up vertically next to your cabinet/piece of furniture, and tape the meter stick contraption tightly onto the cabinet/piece of furniture sing masking tape, in multiple locations for extra strength.
  3. On the top of the meter stick, lie down a meter stick face down, so that about 15-20 cm of the meter stick is on one side, and 80-85 cm is on the other. The short side should be on the far side of the table, and the long side should be at least 30 cm over the table. Secure the single meter stick on with lots of masking tape. Now you should have built something that looks like a crane attached to a cabinet/piece of furniture.
  4. Make two bundles of about 7 or more stacked metal washers, and tape them together using masking tape. Place them on the small side (the 15-20 cm side) of the top of the “crane”, and tape the bundles onto the surface of the meter stick so they are stable. Your “crane” now has weights that will help it remain stable and counteract the weight that will be placed on the long end of the crane.
  5. Cut a piece of string (the string’s needed length depends on how high the top of the long end of the crane is over the table, but I recommend around 75 cm to give yourself enough room if you need it), and fold it in half.
  6. Using that folded string, tape the end that is folded onto the tip of the long side of the “crane”. Trim the ends of the other side so they are both of equal length, and are a few centimeters above the surface of the table.
  7. Tape a marker top-down to the suspended strings, so that the tip of the marker is barely touching the tip of the table.
  8. On the middle of the marker, tape one metal washer (the same as you used before) to use as a weight that stabilizes the marker.
  9. Tape down two pieces of paper horizontally next to to each other under the marker, so the marker has one long paper path to travel on. This is for test where the paper is fixed into place.
  10. For the other test, tape together two pieces of paper, but do not tape them down to the table.
  11. For the non-fixed-paper test, tape together 2 sheets of paper and as the table is being shaken back and forth but not down, have someone slowly slide the paper down.
  12. For the fixed-paper test, shake the table as strong or lightly as you like, with variation for 30 seconds while slowly moving the table to the side at a consistent rate. (Note if you can’t fit 30 seconds of earthquaking on two papers, just add more papers.)

IV.  RECORD & ANALYZE
           Data Tables: Pictures of our seismograms:

          
           Analysis of Data:  
Adrian’s analysis: The first picture shows the seismogram we produced with the non-fixed paper method. The method failed to produced accurate and reliable results. We deemed this method a failure, as indicated by the text in the picture. The second picture showed our second method, where to paper was fixed into place. Although this method wasn’t all that reliable either, it was much more reliable than the first method and the results were inherently better. You can see we tested a “strong earthquake” by shaking the table very hard on the top (the left side) and we tested a “lighter earthquake” by shaking the table less hard on the bottom (the right side). In other words, you can see accurately when we were tested either hard or weaker earthquakes in the second picture, but you can’t really tell when there was a hard or weak earthquake in the first picture. That’s why we deemed our second method a “WIN!”. I believe that the second method was better than the first because when the paper was loose and not fixed into place, it didn’t move when the table did, and it also sometimes drifted to the side and had other off quirks that interfered with the reliability of the data. However, when the paper was taped to the table, it moved with the table, and never drifted off the the side, which led to better and more reliable data.
Brin’s analysis:
Jan’s analysis:

V.  Concept Acquisition (CONCLUSION):  
Adrian’s Conclusion: My guiding question was: “When creating a custom  seismograph, is it better to have the paper that the seismogram will be recorded onto locked into place while the ground below it moves, or is it better to have the paper loose and being dragged forward slowly?”. In our experiments, I found that it was better to have the paper locked into place while the ground below it moves. It is that way because if the paper isn’t locked into place, it doesn’t move while the ground below it moves (it doesn’t move because of inertia), and the paper sometimes drifts to the sides, both of which make the seismograms from the non-fixed-paper seismograph less reliable. That is pretty much what my hypothesis stated, so my hypothesis was correct.
Brin’s conclusion:
Jan’s conclusion:

VI.  Concept Application (FURTHER INQUIRY):    
Adrian’s Further Inquiry: In this lab, my data from the custom seismographs wasn’t very reliably valid by usual scientific standards, but I found that it is incredibly difficult to make your own seismograph that reliably produces valid data. By our own custom seismograph reliability standards, our second test was acceptably reliably valid, but our first simply was not. The biggest reason that the data from the first test wasn’t reliably valid was the same thing that I was writing the whole lab about: the first test’s paper didn’t move with the paper and often drifted to the side.
Brin’s further inquiry:
Jan’s further inquiry:

Extra stuff: Photos and video of our setup:

1 comment:

  1. Very well described Adrian! The illustrations and video were effective in showing the seismograph, the various seismograms produced, and how it worked. The modifications you made and the reasons you gave were supportive to the observations you made as well as the conclusions. Well done!

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