You can't. You'd need to know density and height of rod.
You cannot, there is no single-rule, formulaic relationship between mass and physical measurements like length or diameter.
A rod....5 1/2 feet
Not in the theoretical world, in the practical world: just a very little. The period is determined primarily by the length of the pendulum. If the rod is not a very small fraction of the mass of the bob then the mass center of the rod will have to be taken into account when calculating the "length" of the pendulum.
If the rod has a radius of R and a length of L, then total area = 2*pi*R*(R+L) square units.
No specific clarity about rod
You cannot, there is no single-rule, formulaic relationship between mass and physical measurements like length or diameter.
A rod....5 1/2 feet
The length (one of the spatial dimensions) of an aluminum rod increases when the temperature of the rod increases (so does the height and width of the rod - the other two spatial dimensions - but for a thin rod those changes are not as noticeable.
Not in the theoretical world, in the practical world: just a very little. The period is determined primarily by the length of the pendulum. If the rod is not a very small fraction of the mass of the bob then the mass center of the rod will have to be taken into account when calculating the "length" of the pendulum.
Length:Inch, foot, yard, rod, furlong, mileMass:Pound-mass, poundalWeight:Ounce, pound-force, ton
Linear mass density. You would use this for an object whose mass is uniform in two dimensions, like a rod or a flagpole.
radius=12.4+/-0.5mm length=243.3+/-0.5mm 1)length+width (12.4+/-0.5mm)+(243.3+/-0.5mm) (12.4+243.3)+/-(0.5+0.5) 255.7+/-o.1 2)length-width (243.3-12.4)+/-(0.5+0.5)mm 230.9+/-0.1
Area of rod = length*diameter*pi
the weight should be change by the diameter of the rod.one rod length is thirteen meter and it should be measured in meter only. The formulae to find the weight of rod is d square /162 and you wil get unit weight then multiply it in length then u got a weight of the rod.
If the rod has a radius of R and a length of L, then total area = 2*pi*R*(R+L) square units.
No specific clarity about rod
The length of the movie Hot rod is 1 hour 28 minutes