Here is one example:
Results
The bottle filled one-third
amount of water had 90 pumps of air. The bottle flew for 10.5 seconds. It went
the highest and the longest. The bottle filled with one-half amount of water
had 80 pumps of air and it flew for 5.4 seconds. This bottle went straight up
and did two flips. The bottle filled with two-thirds amount of water had 72
pumps of air and flew for 4.3 seconds.
This bottle flew to the left. The bottle filled with three-fourths
amount of water had 50 pumps of air and flew for 3.5 seconds. The bottle that
was full of water had 18 pumps of air and flew for 1.5 seconds. It barely got
off the ground.
Here is another explanation from Williamsclass.com Science Fair Guide http://www.williamsclass.com/ScienceFair/ScienceFairResults.htm
Your
results should follow these guidelines:
- Include
what you wanted to accomplish and prove during your experiment.
- Describe and report what you discovered. Be sure to include any data that might have been collected. It is important to show this data even if it did not support your hypothesis. The process of completing the experiment with true data is what is important.
- The
function of the Results section is to objectively present your key results,
without interpretation.
The original purpose of this experiment was to _____________________
Example From: http://www.murrieta.k12.ca.us/cms/lib5/CA01000508/Centricity/Domain/843/Example-Balloon_Write-up.doc
The
balloons with one-candle power had flight times of 14.2 seconds, 15.1 seconds,
14.8 seconds, and 15.1 seconds for an average of 14.8 seconds. The balloons
with two-candle power had flight times of 12.6, 13.2, 13.0, and 13.2 seconds,
for an average of 13.0 seconds. The three-candled balloons had times of 11.2,
10.4, 10.2, and 9. 8 seconds for an average time of 10.4 seconds. Therefore the
number of candles determined the speed at which the balloon rose: three candles
were quickest, two candles second, and the single candle balloon the slowest.