A clock pendulum has a period of 2.00s. A simple pendulum setup in front of it gains on the clock so
      that the two vibrate in phase at intervals of 22.0s. Calculate:
      (a.) the period of the simple pendulum
      (b.) the fractional change in length of the simple pendulum necessary for the two periods to be
      equal.Â
Answer
A clock pendulum has a time period of "T_1=" 2.00s
the period of the simple pendulum
"T_2=\\frac{22}{2}=11sec."
Now
the fractional change in length of the simple pendulum necessary for the two periods to be equal.Â
"T=2\\pi\\sqrt{ \\frac{l}{g}}"
Both periods are equal then
"T_1=T_2"
"2\\pi\\sqrt{ \\frac{l_1}{g}}=2\\pi\\sqrt{ \\frac{l_2}{g}}"
So fractional change in length
"\\frac{l_2}{l_1}=(\\frac{T_2}{T_1}) ^2=(\\frac{11}{2}) ^2=30.25"
Comments
Leave a comment