The shorter the pendulum the more swings you get.
Yes, temperature can have an impact on a simple pendulum made with a metallic wire. As the temperature changes, the length of the wire can expand or contract, which can affect the period of the pendulum's swing. This change in length can cause the pendulum to either speed up or slow down.
The simple answer (what most high school teachers, for example, would say)is that the period (length of time for a swing) only depends on the length of thependulum. This is a pretty good approximation for a well-made pendulum.============================When you sit down to work out the period of a pendulum on paper, you draw a mass,hanging in gravity, from the end of a string that has no weight, with no air around it.When you turn the crank, you discover that the period of the pendulum ... the timeit takes for one complete back-and-forth swing ... depends only on the length ofthe string and the local acceleration of gravity, and that the pendulum never stops.When you build the real thing, you discover that your original analysis is a little bit 'off'.Your physical pendulum always stops after a while, and while it's still going, theperiod is slightly different from what you calculated. So you begin to do researchexperiments to figure out why.Eventually, you figure out that the weight of the string makes the effective lengthof the pendulum different from the actual length of the string, and that the pendulumloses energy and stops because it has to plow through air.What you do to reduce these influences:-- You use the lightest, strongest string you can find, and the heaviest mass thatthe string can hold, so that the mass at the end is huge compared to the mass ofthe string.-- You operate the whole pendulum in an evacuated tube ... with all the air pumped out.When you do that, you have a pendulum that's good enough, and close enoughto the theoretical calculation, that you can use it to measure the acceleration ofgravity in different places.
Pendulum clocks can become slow in summer due to expansion of materials in warmer temperatures, which can affect the length of the pendulum and thus the timing of the clock. As the pendulum lengthens, it takes longer to complete each swing, leading to a slower overall timekeeping.
That is a misspelling of Pendulum. A pendulum is a weight suspended from a pivot so that it can swing freely. Some clocks have this...
By dampening. This can be done by changing the length of the pendulum The period is 2*pi*square root of (L/g), where L is the length of the pendulum and g the acceleration due to gravity. A pendulum clock can be made faster by turning the adjustment screw on the bottom of the bob inward, making the pendulum slightly shorter.
180 degrees
A shorter pendulum will make more swings per second. Or per minute. Or whatever.
Yes, temperature can have an impact on a simple pendulum made with a metallic wire. As the temperature changes, the length of the wire can expand or contract, which can affect the period of the pendulum's swing. This change in length can cause the pendulum to either speed up or slow down.
The pendulum will take more time in air to stop completely in comparision with water
The simple answer (what most high school teachers, for example, would say)is that the period (length of time for a swing) only depends on the length of thependulum. This is a pretty good approximation for a well-made pendulum.============================When you sit down to work out the period of a pendulum on paper, you draw a mass,hanging in gravity, from the end of a string that has no weight, with no air around it.When you turn the crank, you discover that the period of the pendulum ... the timeit takes for one complete back-and-forth swing ... depends only on the length ofthe string and the local acceleration of gravity, and that the pendulum never stops.When you build the real thing, you discover that your original analysis is a little bit 'off'.Your physical pendulum always stops after a while, and while it's still going, theperiod is slightly different from what you calculated. So you begin to do researchexperiments to figure out why.Eventually, you figure out that the weight of the string makes the effective lengthof the pendulum different from the actual length of the string, and that the pendulumloses energy and stops because it has to plow through air.What you do to reduce these influences:-- You use the lightest, strongest string you can find, and the heaviest mass thatthe string can hold, so that the mass at the end is huge compared to the mass ofthe string.-- You operate the whole pendulum in an evacuated tube ... with all the air pumped out.When you do that, you have a pendulum that's good enough, and close enoughto the theoretical calculation, that you can use it to measure the acceleration ofgravity in different places.
Pendulum clocks can become slow in summer due to expansion of materials in warmer temperatures, which can affect the length of the pendulum and thus the timing of the clock. As the pendulum lengthens, it takes longer to complete each swing, leading to a slower overall timekeeping.
Pendulums have been used for thousands of years as a time keeping device in various civilizations. Assuming that it is only displaced by a small angle, a pendulum wall have a period of 2pi*√(L/g) where L is the length of the pendulum and g is the acceeleration due to gravity, normally 9.81m/s². One of the cool things about pendulums is that if one is made with a length of one meter, it will have a period of 2.00607 seconds, meaning it will take just slightly more than one second to swing from one side to another.
That is a misspelling of Pendulum. A pendulum is a weight suspended from a pivot so that it can swing freely. Some clocks have this...
Since the period of a simple pendulum (for short swings) in proportional to the square root of its length, then making the length one quarter of its original length would make the period one half of its original period.Periodapproximately = 2 pi square root (length/acceleration due to gravity)
As the arm supporting the pendulum expands in the warmer temperatures of summer, so the swing distance slightly increases, so taking longer to swing and slowing down the clock. Back in the colder winter weather, the pendulum support contracts, getting slightly shorter. This increases the speed of the swing and the timing is increased. So in summer time slows down, and in winter time speed up. This is when adjustment is usually made to regain the correct time.
Assuming that this question concerns a pendulum: there are infinitely many possible answers. Among these are: the name of the person swinging the pendulum, the colour of the pendulum, the day of the week on which the experiment is conducted, the mass of the pendulum, my age, etc.
I think you're saying that the pendulum itself is an iron bar.-- The period of the swing is determined by the pendulum's length. Whether the pendulumis a long distributed mass, or just all one lump down at the end, its effective length ineither case is the distance from the pivot to its center of mass.-- Rising temperature makes the iron bar longer, but doesn't change its mass. So itscenter of mass becomes farther from the pivot, and its period of swing increases.-- So higher temperature would make the clock run slower.This sounds like an elegant way to detect small differences in local gravity at differentplaces. I don't know for a fact, but I'll just bet that this is how it's actually done, witha portable instrument based on a pendulum-regulated timekeeping device.