asked 115k views
1 vote
The period of a pendulum is the time it takes the pendulum to swing back and forth once. If the only dimensional quantities that the period depends on are the acceleration of gravity, g, and the length of the pendulum, l , what combination of g and l must the period be proportional to? (Acceleration has SI units of m/s2 ).

asked
User Chiina
by
8.0k points

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

T = 2pi √ L / g

We see that the period is equal to the square root of the length and the acceleration of the gravity.

Step-by-step explanation:

In a simple pendulum the angular velocity is

W = √L / g

Angular velocity is related

w = 2π f

Frequency was also related

F = 1 / T

We substitute

T = 2pi √ L / g

We see that the period is equal to the square root of the length and the acceleration of the gravity.

answered
User DSDmark
by
8.0k points
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