Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Conclusions

My prediction ended up proving to be false. The hot temperature flower ended up drinking the most water out of the three flowers, and the cold temperature flower drank the least amount of water. 


However, while the room temperature flower and the cold temperature flower looked pretty similar from the first measurement to the last measurement, the hot temperature flower's appearance changed drastically. 







So while the hot temperature flower drank the most amount of water, I believe that it is most beneficial for flowers to drink room temperature water because the appearance stays nice and it drinks a decent amount of water. Having a flower drink cold temperature water also wouldn't be terrible, but it won't drink as much water as a flower at room temperature.

Hot Temperature Flower


The hot temperature flower drank a total of 60ml of water.

Cold Temperature Flower


The cold temperature flower drank a total of 10ml of water. 

Room Temperature Flower


Overall, the room temperature flower ended up drinking a total of 25ml of water. 

9:45PM

Seventh Measurement 

For my last measurement the room temperature flower was at 175ml of water, the cold temperature flower was at 190ml of water, and the hot temperature flower was at 140ml of water. 

8:00PM

Sixth Measurement

The sixth measurement happened at 8:00pm. The room temperature flower was at 180ml of water, the cold temperature flower was still at 195ml of water, and the hot temperature flower was now at 145ml of water.

7:00PM

Fifth Measurement

The next time I took a measurement was at 7:00pm. The room temperature flower was now at 185ml of water, the cold temperature flower still had no change and was at 195ml of water, and the hot temperature flower was now at 145ml of water.