BUILDING A FOUNDATION
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Explore Your Ideas
To answer the key question for the activity, you must deliberately
change the length of a pendulum. Each set of partners in your class will
use a different length pendulum.
Experiment: If the length of a pendulum increases, what
happens to the time it takes to swing back and forth 10 times?
Before you do any experiment, you have to know how you will do it!
As you learned in the last activity, the procedure you use is very
important. Everyone will follow the exact same procedure, except
for using a different length for the pendulum. Your teacher will
demonstrate the procedure for you.
Read and follow the directions below very carefully. Because you don’t expect to measure an exact value, you will make four measurements of the time for 10 swings. You will then calculate the average as your best value. Take turns being the Timer and the Counter.
STEP 1 Timer: Use a meter stick to measure the length of the string in centimeters. Measure from the knot to where the washer is tied to the string.
On your record sheet, record your measurement in a data table like
the one shown.
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You and
your partner
will need:
- clock with a second hand
- pendulum (washer attached to a string, knot at top of string)
- meter stick
- access to a calculator
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