Depends on the swing... probably around a foot or two.
The question states "while on a swing" which I believe implies that the swing is in use and therefore in motion. At rest the swing could be at "a foot or two" but while in motion the swing would get exponentially higher with every stroke of the legs. The total height could not be figured without the height at the top of the swing and the length of the assembly ie.. rope, chain, vine etc...plus the material which the child sits on. And are we talking about height at the end of their feet, at the bum or head height. I've swung on a number of swings and consider myself somewhat of a swinger and I can say that on most swings I've been on they go 4-6 feet high.
Django Reinhardt
yes i think it does since one moment you can be going high then the next low and you can change is your going fast or slow
It is a poetic stanza.
The swing
The Swing was created in 1983.
motion of the needle of a sewing machine is what is the motino is this?
yes is motion
That would have to be perpetual motion
At the top of one of the hills, you are in horizontal motion, but your vertical motion is zero. Same for a child at the bottom of the arc on a park swing. Same for anyone at the highest or lowest point on a moving Ferris Wheel.
When the child is up in the air on either side of the climax of the swing, it builds potential energy to drop or swing back down towards the other side. When the child falls, gravity and the potential energy work together to make the child fall, and in turn, the kinetic energy not used for the fall goes into pushing the child back up on the other side. Say that there was no gravity involved in this situation. The child would only make it to the bottom of the swing, closest to the ground, because the amount of energy you store up in going higher cannot be amounted to greater as you swing down.
In human bipedal walking, "arm swing" is the natural motion of the arms swinging in motion with the opposing leg to prevent the body twisting.
Perpetual motion.
A body undergoes simple harmonic motion if the acceleration of the particle is proportional to the displacement of the particle from the mean position and the acceleration is always directed towards that mean. Provided the amplitude is small, a swing is an example of simple harmonic motion.
Because if the child falls off the swing, then they will just bounce on the soft rubber.
swing, pendullim in a clock, printer inside
Force of tension, exerted from the swing rope, keeps the swing moving in the horizontal back and forth motion. The force of gravity keeps the swing from staying at the far right or far left because it always wants the swing to be pulled to Earth, but the force of tension wants to keep it up. Air resistance, like friction, eventually slows the swing down to a halt.
resonance