Thanks for the further clarification! If you ran this several times, you could calculate standard deviations or confidence intervals. It would be nice if you could report one such measure, so it's clearer that the differences are not just some random fluctuations. E.g. you could include them as error bars in your plots. You could also run a statistical test (in this case, a t-test is very easy to do) and report the p-value. Those are the things I'd expect my students to do if they'd have to do something like this for a report or a project, because it's the only way for people to judge if differences show clear signal or are just random fluctuations due to measurement noise.
Also: I should've said this in my first post already, which in hindsight might sound too negative: I think this is a cool project and you did a great job! I just thought this might improve the presentation of your results a bit.