Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
The Physical Pendulum
You all know how an ideal pendulum works:
it swings back and forth with a period which depends
only on its length:
L
period T = 2 * pi * sqrt [ --- ]
g
Ideal pendula are abstract creations;
any real pendulum breaks the ideal requirements of
- massless string
- infinitely compact mass
As your lab manual for this week describes, it is possible to
derive a relationship between the period of a physical pendulum
and several of its properties:
2 2
2 4 pi 2 4 pi I
T d = [ ---- ] * d + [ ------- ]
g m g
Your job this week:
- Measure the mass and length of a meter stick
- Measure the center of mass of the meter stick,
and the distance from that center of mass to a set of holes
- Suspend the meters stick from 5 of the holes, and
measure its period for each (2 trials of 20 swings each)
- Make a graph from which you can determine g, the local value of
gravitational acceleration, and I, the moment of
inertia of the meterstick around its center of mass
- Answer the questions:
- Does your value of g agree within the uncertainties
with the standard value?
- Does your value of I agree within the uncertainties
with the theoretical value (based on size and shape)?
- Which of the measurements you make introduces the largest
component of the uncertainty in the value of g?
What do I have to submit?
You may NOT use a computer for any purpose in this
week's exercise. Paper, pencil, ruler, calculator -- no more.
Once again, I want to try to give you a chance to finish all
your work by the end of the lab period.
Therefore, I expect:
- A neat table of all your measurements,
including headings and all appropriate units and uncertainties
- A table which lists
- Each type of measurement you make this week
- The tool you used to make it
- The percentage uncertainty in your measurements using this tool
- Calculation of the moment of inertia of the meterstick
around its center of mass, based on its size and shape.
Include uncertainty.
- A graph showing a plot of (T^2 * d), with units of (seconds^2 * meters),
versus (d^2), with units of (meters^2).
- Calculation of g, based on the slope of the graph.
Include uncertainty.
- Calculation of I, based on the horizontal intercept
of the graph. Include uncertainty.
- Answer to the question: Is your value of g equal to the standard
value, within the uncertainty?
- Answer to the question: Are the two values of moment of inertia
equal, within the uncertainty?
- Answer to the question: Which of the measurements you
make introduces the largest
component of the uncertainty in the value of g?
I will deduct a full letter grade from any report
which includes the phrase "human error."
Last modified Apr 4, 2001 by MWR.
Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.