I assume you want to get the pendulum's period. If you record a greater amount of oscillations, you will reduce the error - since if you manually measure time, you are likely to get an error of a few tenths of a second.
First take the average of your times:(12.6 + 12.7 + 12.5 + 12.6 + 12.7) / 5 = 12.62This is your average time for 20 oscillations. The period is the time for one oscillation, and therefore the period is 12.62/20 = 0.631 seconds.A complete oscillation is when the pendulum swings from the start position to the opposite position on the swing and back again. Assuming this is what you counted twenty of, then your pendulum is 10 cm long.If you counted 20 swings to each side, then you really only counted 10 oscillations. This means that your period would be 1.262, and would suggest that your pendulum is 40cm long.
Imp Years was created on 2000-04-10.
For a simple pendulum: Period = 6.3437 (rounded) seconds
5 is 21 11 is 1365
Vitt em 111 Re E Imp value worth?
I'd guess that if it swings 10 times, it makes 10 swings.
Aladdin - 1994 Mission Imp Possible 1-44 was released on: USA: 10 November 1994
The motion of the simple pendulum will be in simple harmonic if it is in oscillation.
23.52 MPG
Take a pendulum that is 10 meters off of the ground. As the Earth rotates, the pendulum will also rotate. Measure the time it takes for the pendulum to return to the exact spot. It equals 23 h 56 m 4 s.
The amplitude of oscillations of the scale will increase because the weight added from the slices of turkey will cause the scale to oscillate more before coming to rest.
Scale of 1-10? 100. They're bloody epic.