Tag Archive for 'gravity'

The Compound Pendulum

OBJECT: To study the properties of a compound pendulum, and to determine the acceleration due to gravity by the use of such a pendulum.

METHOD: An experimental pendulum is suspended successively about several axes at different points along its length and the period about each axis is observed. A graph is plotted of the period versus the distance of the axis of suspension from one end of the pendulum. The nature of the graph shows the physical properties of the compound pendulum. From values of the period and the corresponding length of the equivalent simple pendulum as determined from the graph, the acceleration due to gravity is calculated. From the mass of the pendulum and its radius of gyration as obtained from the curve, the rotational inertia of the pendulum is computed.

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The Acceleration of a Freely Falling Body

Figure 1 - Free Fall ApparatusOBJECT: To study the motion of a freely falling body; in particular, to measure g, the acceleration due to gravity.

METHOD: An object is allowed to fall freely, and its positions at the ends of successive equal intervals are recorded on a coated paper strip by means of electric sparks. From these data graphs of distance-time and velocity-time are plotted. The acceleration is determined from the slope of the velocity-time graph.

THEORY: The average speed v of a body is the quotient of the distance s which it traverses and the time t required to travel that distance. In symbols (equation 1):

vs/t

The instantaneous speed v of an object is defined as the limit of this ratio as the time is made vanishingly small. Symbolically (equation 2):

v = Δst

where Δs represents a small increment of distance traversed in the corresponding increment of time Δt.

In Fig. 2 curve (a) shows the distance-time relationship for a freely falling body. In any such curve Eq. (2) states that the instantaneous speed is given by the slope of a tangent drawn to the curve at the point for the instant in question. If the speed were constant the slope would be constant and the curve would be a straight line. For a freely falling body this is evidently not true, as the speed, and hence the slope of the curve, is continually increasing.

When the velocity of a body varies, the motion is said to be accelerated. Acceleration is defined as the time rate of change of velocity; in symbols (equation 3):

a = (vtvo)/t

where a represents the average acceleration of a body which changes its velocity from vo to vt in the time t. Since acceleration has the dimensions of a velocity divided by a time, the absolute unit in the metric system will be the centimeter per second per second and in the British system the foot per second per second; usually written, cm/sec² and ft/sec².
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