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It was shown that the length of the string affected the period of a pendulum. This was
displayed in the results as the different times taken for 20 oscillations whilst changing the length of the
string varied from 12.60 to 30.90 seconds. Meanwhile the times calculated for one oscillation varied
from 0.63 to 1.54 seconds. Here the reasoning behind this finding. An object on a pendulum with a long
string is further away from the axis of the pendulum. This means that it has to cover a longer distance to
return to where it came from. This is the case since a longer radius from the axis of rotation means a
longer arc length for the bob to travel along. The formula linking the length of the string to the period of
the pendulum is seen below:
𝑇 = 2𝜋√𝑙𝑔
Where ‘T’ is the period, ‘l’ is the length of the string and ‘g’ is the gravitational field strength.
The mass of the bob doesn’t affect the period of the pendulum since the movement is due to
gravity. Acceleration due to gravity is a constant figure( 9.8 ms -2) and no matter how heavy the bob is,
the pendulum will accelerate at this rate and take the same amount of time to complete one back and
fro movement. As shown in the experiment, the time taken for 20 oscillations only varied from 24.10 to
25.18 seconds. This variation in the results is only to due the random error and the vary reaction times
to measure the oscillations. The times calculated for one oscillation with varying masses also had a small
range from 1.21 to 1.26 seconds.
Finally the angle of displacement was tested and results showed that this factor doesn’t really
affect the period of a pendulum. Times for 20 oscillations recorded at different angles varied only from
21.65 to 22.65 seconds whilst the time calculated for one oscillation range from 1.08 to only 1.13
seconds. When the angle of displacement increases, the starting height of the bob is higher thus it will
accelerate over a longer period and gain a greater velocity. However, this movement is over a longer
distance, so the time taken for one oscillation will not decrease. It will remain constant.
It was advisable to divide the results by 20 to reduce random error due to human reaction time.
Sources of Error
Sources of Error:
- The time for one oscillation was slightly inaccurate as friction due to air resistance slows the
pendulum down with each swing.
- There was uncertainty in the reference point at which to start and the stop the watch.
Precautions
- The time taken for 20 oscillations was divided by 20 to reduce the error due to human
reaction time.
- All windows were closed to ensure that the force of the wind did not affect the movement
of the pendulum.