The length. Long pendulums are slow, short pendulums are fast.
When you stop pushing a swing, friction and air resistance gradually slow it down. Without a force acting on it, such as the push you provided, the swing loses energy and eventually comes to a rest due to these opposing forces.
Opposite words like "fast" and "slow" can refer to the same speed in a relative sense. For example, a car moving at 50 mph might be considered "fast" compared to a runner, but "slow" compared to a racing car. The perception of speed is subjective and depends on the context in which it is being compared.
The speed of a pendulum depends on its length and the gravitational pull. Taller pendulums swing slower than shorter ones, as the longer distance allows more time to complete each cycle. Additionally, heavier pendulums may swing faster due to their greater inertia.
When you stop pushing someone on a swing, the swing will gradually slow down due to the forces of friction and air resistance acting on it. Eventually, the swing will come to a stop at the lowest point of its arc. The person on the swing will feel the deceleration and will likely have to start pumping their legs to keep the swing in motion.
Yes, friction is demonstrated when you push a swing to start it moving. The friction between the swing's ropes and the attachment points, as well as the friction between the seat and the air resistance, helps to slow down the swing's movement over time.
Yes. Jazz can be as fast as 400+ beats per minute for uptempo swing, and as slow as 40 beats per minute for ballads.
What is your definition of slow? Minutes, years, eons? Some that might do: slow and periodic: the progression of the seasons fast and non-periodic: an explosion fast and periodic: the swing of a pendulum slow and non-periodic: the weathering of rocks.
Definately the -10 if you swing the bat fast enough, which you'd have to swing pretty slow not to. The -10 is the best for you probably (more pop)
it depends on how steep the slope is.
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
No know this because they have this sticky slim that makes them go slow they would have to have to have legs to go fast
Prestissimo - extremely fast (more than 200 bpm)Presto - very fast (168-200 bpm)Allegro - fast and bright or "march tempo" (120-168 bpm)Moderato - moderately (108-120 bpm)Andante - at a walking pace (76-108 bpm)Adagio - slow and stately (literally, "at ease") (66-76 bpm)Larghetto - rather broadly (60-66 bpm)Fast Swing: (264, 276, 288, 304, 320, 336, ...)Up Swing: (208, 216, 224, 232, 240, 252)Medium Up Swing: (160, 168, 176, 184, 192, 200)Medium Swing: (120, 126, 132, 138, 144, 152)Moderate Swing: (104, 108, 112, 116)Slow Swing: (88, 92, 96, 100)Medium Ballad: (72, 76, 80, 84)Slow Ballad: (..., 60, 63, 66, 69)
not a fast but slow
slow-fast-slow (Apex)
Depends. I have seen 6th graders with a super fast swing or a really slow one. It depends on how much you practice and how well you know your skills. Hope this helps!:-)
slow
fast and slow