Professional Physics Pendulum Simulation

Simple Pendulum Physics Simulation

Explore the relationship between pendulum length, period, and gravitational acceleration

Simulation
Theory
Quiz

Interactive Pendulum

20.0 cm
10 cm 30 cm
0.1 cm
0.05 cm 0.5 cm
90 s
80 s 100 s
1 s
0.1 s 2 s

Results

Period (T) = t/n = 90/100 = 0.9 s
g = 4π²L/T² = 4π²×0.20/(0.9)² = 9.74 m/s²

Percentage error in g: 3.2%

Error contributions:

  • From length measurement (ΔL/L): 0.5%
  • From time measurement (2×Δt/t): 2.2%
Δg/g = ΔL/L + 2(Δt/t) = 0.1/20.0 + 2(1/90) = 0.032

Pendulum Theory

Dimensional Analysis

The period T of a simple pendulum depends on:

  • Length of string (L)
  • Acceleration due to gravity (g)
  • Mass of bob (m)

We assume the relationship:

T = k Lˣ gʸ mᶻ

Where k is a dimensionless constant. Writing the dimensional equation:

[M⁰L⁰T¹] = [L]ˣ [LT⁻²]ʸ [M]ᶻ

Equating dimensions:

For M: 0 = z
For L: 0 = x + y
For T: 1 = -2y

Solving gives:

y = -½, x = ½, z = 0

Thus the period is:

T = k √(L/g)

Experiment shows k = 2π for small angles, giving:

T = 2π √(L/g)

Error Analysis

The calculated value of g depends on measurements of L and T:

g = 4π² L/T²

The relative error in g is:

Δg/g = ΔL/L + 2(ΔT/T)

Since T = t/n (where n is number of oscillations timed):

ΔT/T = Δt/t

Test Your Understanding

1. The period of a simple pendulum depends on:
Length and gravitational acceleration
Mass and length only
Mass and gravitational acceleration
Mass, length, and material of the bob
Correct! Dimensional analysis shows the period depends only on length (L) and gravitational acceleration (g). The mass (m) has exponent 0 in the dimensional analysis.
2. If you double the length of a pendulum, the period becomes:
√2 times the original period
2 times the original period
4 times the original period
Unchanged
Correct! Since T ∝ √L, doubling the length increases the period by √2 ≈ 1.414 times. Try adjusting the length in the simulation to verify this relationship.
3. Which measurement typically contributes more to error in g?
Time measurement (because error is multiplied by 2)
Length measurement
Both contribute equally
Neither contributes to error
Correct! The time measurement error is multiplied by 2 in the error formula (Δg/g = ΔL/L + 2(Δt/t)), making it typically the dominant source of error. Check the error breakdown in the simulation results.

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