No. Only the length of the string and the value of g does.
The shorter the pendulum the more swings you get.
when a pendulum swings it creates pontential energy
You can affect the pendulum to move down or up and it will be will might be 11 or 12 seconds because of the length and how you want the pendulum for it to move.
swings = cycles x time ; it is a direct relationship with time
Not at all, as long as the mass of the 'bob' is large compared to the mass of the string.
If it is a short pendulum, then the leg or whatever you call it has a smaller distance to cover, and therefore can swing faster than a longer pendulum.
There's no relationship between the length of the pendulum and the number of swings.However, a shorter pendulum has a shorter period, i.e. the swings come more often.So a short pendulum has more swings than a long pendulum has in the same amountof time.
I'd guess that if it swings 10 times, it makes 10 swings.
The shorter the pendulum the more swings you get.
A shorter pendulum will make more swings per second. Or per minute. Or whatever.
when a pendulum swings it creates pontential energy
You can affect the pendulum to move down or up and it will be will might be 11 or 12 seconds because of the length and how you want the pendulum for it to move.
A pendulum swings as far out as you care to set it going, irrespective of length.
swings = cycles x time ; it is a direct relationship with time
Pendulum Swings - 2011 was released on: USA: 8 January 2011
Not at all, as long as the mass of the 'bob' is large compared to the mass of the string.
The pendulum swings twice as far.