Forensics C
Re: Forensics C
At regional, there were questions about the "medulla index" for each type of hair. As far as I can tell, they probably meant the medullary index, and this is not dependent on the type of hair. Does anyone know what the medullary index would be for each hair?
Also, does anyone know the index of refraction for types of glass? I know that for glass analysis, the glass dissapears in the liquid with the same index of refraction, but without knowing what kind of glass has that index of refraction, I'm not sure what I would do with that information, and I was asked to identify the type of glass at regional.
Also, does anyone know the index of refraction for types of glass? I know that for glass analysis, the glass dissapears in the liquid with the same index of refraction, but without knowing what kind of glass has that index of refraction, I'm not sure what I would do with that information, and I was asked to identify the type of glass at regional.
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Re: Forensics C
You can look up average/common medullary indexes. This was the first thing I got when I googled, but you should cross-check with other sources. http://www.aquinashs.org/ourpages/auto/ ... on%201.ppt18alia wrote:At regional, there were questions about the "medulla index" for each type of hair. As far as I can tell, they probably meant the medullary index, and this is not dependent on the type of hair. Does anyone know what the medullary index would be for each hair?
Also, does anyone know the index of refraction for types of glass? I know that for glass analysis, the glass dissapears in the liquid with the same index of refraction, but without knowing what kind of glass has that index of refraction, I'm not sure what I would do with that information, and I was asked to identify the type of glass at regional.
For glass, I usually keep a chart of indexes for common things that show up. Again, google for them. Definitely know crown glass.
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Re: Forensics C
Two quick questions from a rookie forensics olympiad.
I was just wondering how accurate the provided powders descriptions are. My partner and I just were at an invitational and we got our results and not everything totally made sense.
1) Does KCl actually react with benedicts? We've never been able to get a reaction during testing. And in theory, it doesn't quite make sense.
2) Will MgSO4 always be in cylindrical crystals? During our testing, we had it in a powder form, and we were unable to differentiate between it and CaSO4. If anyone knows how to differentiate between those two, in powder form, that would also be helpful.
Any help is appreciated! Thanks!
I was just wondering how accurate the provided powders descriptions are. My partner and I just were at an invitational and we got our results and not everything totally made sense.
1) Does KCl actually react with benedicts? We've never been able to get a reaction during testing. And in theory, it doesn't quite make sense.
2) Will MgSO4 always be in cylindrical crystals? During our testing, we had it in a powder form, and we were unable to differentiate between it and CaSO4. If anyone knows how to differentiate between those two, in powder form, that would also be helpful.
Any help is appreciated! Thanks!
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Re: Forensics C
1) I don't even use Benedicts for KCl. I only use its purple flame as its indicator - as long as you don't contaminate it when you do the flame test, it should be fine. Note: The purple hues might be kinda weakPixelsforKorea wrote:Two quick questions from a rookie forensics olympiad.
I was just wondering how accurate the provided powders descriptions are. My partner and I just were at an invitational and we got our results and not everything totally made sense.
1) Does KCl actually react with benedicts? We've never been able to get a reaction during testing. And in theory, it doesn't quite make sense.
2) Will MgSO4 always be in cylindrical crystals? During our testing, we had it in a powder form, and we were unable to differentiate between it and CaSO4. If anyone knows how to differentiate between those two, in powder form, that would also be helpful.
Any help is appreciated! Thanks!
2) No, it won't. I wouldn't fully trust appearance of the powder as a primary way to identify it. And a way to differentiate those two is by solubility, in which MgSO4 is and CaSO4 isn't. Although they're both sulfates of alkali earth metals, CaSO4 is a one of the exceptions to the solubility rule regarding sulfates. Plus, a way to confirm MgSO4 is to add NaOH to a solution of it. The double replacement reaction forms the insoluble precipitate, Mg(OH)2, which, according to my observations, has a milky, gel-like appearance (that test is best done in a test tube so you can easily see it).
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Re: Forensics C
For the Rfs of different molecules on nationals tests, the answer key usually just says things like 0.97, 0.55, 0.34, 0.24. Do they allow for a range of answers, so if I say 0.95, 0.59, 0.32, 0.22, will they accept that as valid, or will they only accept exactly what they have, can somebody with experience answer this?
Also, how does fluorescence work? Do we just take the gel-paper thing and shine a "flashlight"/blacklight at it? Are there two buttons on the blacklight for long and short wave length?
Also, how does fluorescence work? Do we just take the gel-paper thing and shine a "flashlight"/blacklight at it? Are there two buttons on the blacklight for long and short wave length?
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Re: Forensics C
You definitely don't want to be off by too much but I would think so (then again they never return your nats tests so in reality you will never know).AllenWang314 wrote:For the Rfs of different molecules on nationals tests, the answer key usually just says things like 0.97, 0.55, 0.34, 0.24. Do they allow for a range of answers, so if I say 0.95, 0.59, 0.32, 0.22, will they accept that as valid, or will they only accept exactly what they have, can somebody with experience answer this?
Also, how does fluorescence work? Do we just take the gel-paper thing and shine a "flashlight"/blacklight at it? Are there two buttons on the blacklight for long and short wave length?
And for your second question:
pikachu4919 wrote:The fluorescence is part of the TLC (thin layer chromat) you'll be doing on samples of different kinds of paints. iirc you perform the TLC on the paint and see if your sample will glow under different wavelength settings of a blacklight, and that's most of what you do.AllenWang314 wrote:Regarding national tests, what is fluorescence? What area (chromat, fibers, blood, or chem) of the event is it about? And what do we have to know about it, and what are websites that can give enough info?
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Nationals 2016 ~ 4th place Forensics
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Nationals 2016 ~ 4th place Forensics
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Re: Forensics C
What kinds of glass do we need to know, is the list on the rule chart? Did you use a specific website for it, or did you just search the glass with the word refac index?sciduck wrote:You can look up average/common medullary indexes. This was the first thing I got when I googled, but you should cross-check with other sources. http://www.aquinashs.org/ourpages/auto/ ... on%201.ppt18alia wrote:At regional, there were questions about the "medulla index" for each type of hair. As far as I can tell, they probably meant the medullary index, and this is not dependent on the type of hair. Does anyone know what the medullary index would be for each hair?
Also, does anyone know the index of refraction for types of glass? I know that for glass analysis, the glass dissapears in the liquid with the same index of refraction, but without knowing what kind of glass has that index of refraction, I'm not sure what I would do with that information, and I was asked to identify the type of glass at regional.
For glass, I usually keep a chart of indexes for common things that show up. Again, google for them. Definitely know crown glass.
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Re: Forensics C
I did the latter. I don't believe there is a list, I just looked at old tests to pick the important ones.Abekitt wrote:What kinds of glass do we need to know, is the list on the rule chart? Did you use a specific website for it, or did you just search the glass with the word refac index?sciduck wrote:You can look up average/common medullary indexes. This was the first thing I got when I googled, but you should cross-check with other sources. http://www.aquinashs.org/ourpages/auto/ ... on%201.ppt18alia wrote:At regional, there were questions about the "medulla index" for each type of hair. As far as I can tell, they probably meant the medullary index, and this is not dependent on the type of hair. Does anyone know what the medullary index would be for each hair?
Also, does anyone know the index of refraction for types of glass? I know that for glass analysis, the glass dissapears in the liquid with the same index of refraction, but without knowing what kind of glass has that index of refraction, I'm not sure what I would do with that information, and I was asked to identify the type of glass at regional.
For glass, I usually keep a chart of indexes for common things that show up. Again, google for them. Definitely know crown glass.
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Re: Forensics C
Did anyone take the Pennsylvania State Tournament Forensics test? It is always written by Harriton and is, in my opinion, by far the hardest test I have ever taken, national tests included. This year I believe there were 10 powders to test and 11 polymers, 5 of which were plastics that were easy enough to ID, the difficulty lying in the 6 different fabrics/hairs. Now, traditionally, I identify fabrics by burning them and observing their odors and how they react in the flames. I can also identify certain fabrics under a microscope, as long as they are natural fibers (is there anyway to distinguish synthetic ones from each other??). However, they only gave one tiny thread for each of the two fabrics, and single hairs that were even a challenge to find inside of the little bag that they were in. Furthermore, there were only two low-quality microscopes inside of the room for the 10 or so teams to share.
My question is, how can one possibly ID those hairs/fabrics if they didn't use a microscope? Is that even possible? Is it even the right strategy to try and identify the hairs under the microscope since it takes an exorbitant amount of time to place the hairs on the microscope slips and even locate them under the microscope? There was significantly more to the test than just ID-ing, so should I just skip the hairs???? I'm utterly confused, especially since I was using a microscope for an extended period of time, long enough to (unintentionally) prevent a team who placed from using the microscope (I'm fairly confident).
Anyone who took this PA test PLEASE help me understand how this test was "extremely easy."
My question is, how can one possibly ID those hairs/fabrics if they didn't use a microscope? Is that even possible? Is it even the right strategy to try and identify the hairs under the microscope since it takes an exorbitant amount of time to place the hairs on the microscope slips and even locate them under the microscope? There was significantly more to the test than just ID-ing, so should I just skip the hairs???? I'm utterly confused, especially since I was using a microscope for an extended period of time, long enough to (unintentionally) prevent a team who placed from using the microscope (I'm fairly confident).
Anyone who took this PA test PLEASE help me understand how this test was "extremely easy."
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Re: Forensics C
So on the nationals website there are images of the rooms for every events except Forensics (here). Anyone involved in nats know if this is on purpose, or if someone just overlooked it?
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