There's no relationship between the length of the pendulum and the number of swings.
However, a shorter pendulum has a shorter period, i.e. the swings come more often.
So a short pendulum has more swings than a long pendulum has in the same amount
of time.
no. it affects the period of the cycles.
Length of the rope, speed at which the pendulum is moving, friction between the rope and the air, the rope and its suspension point, and within the rope itself.
A shorter pendulum will make more swings per second. Or per minute. Or whatever.
The period of the pendulum can be influenced by the local magnitude of gravity, by the length of the string, and by the density of the material in the swinging rod (which influences the effective length).It's not affected by the weight of the bob, or by how far you pull it to the side before you let it go.
No relationship.
1/v = 2pi sqrt(l/g)
swings = cycles x time ; it is a direct relationship with time
The shorter the pendulum the more swings you get.
no. it affects the period of the cycles.
i got NO IDEA?
Length of the rope, speed at which the pendulum is moving, friction between the rope and the air, the rope and its suspension point, and within the rope itself.
A shorter pendulum will make more swings per second. Or per minute. Or whatever.
If it is a short pendulum, then the leg or whatever you call it has a smaller distance to cover, and therefore can swing faster than a longer pendulum.
The length of the pendulum, the angular displacement of the pendulum and the force of gravity. The displacement can have a significant effect if it is not through a small angle.
No. Only the length of the string and the value of g does.
It's a pendulum. The length of the rope also influences the number of sways.
Unidades ni idea