I think it will as it has mechanical parts to make the pendulum move, not 100% sure.
Yes. The period of the pendulum (the time it takes it swing back and forth once) depends on the length of the pendulum, and also on how strong gravity is. The moon is much smaller and less massive than the earth, and as a result, gravity is considerably weaker. This would make the period of a pendulum longer on the moon than the period of the same pendulum would be on earth.
A simple pendulum.
The acceleration of a pendulum is zero at the lowest point of its swing.
Yes, but it will swing the same amount of times, with a possible minor exception to do air/wind resistance, which doesn't occur on the moon.
A pendulum.
A heavier pendulum will swing longer due to its greater inertia.
how is pendulum swing related to teaching process?
Yes. The period of the pendulum (the time it takes it swing back and forth once) depends on the length of the pendulum, and also on how strong gravity is. The moon is much smaller and less massive than the earth, and as a result, gravity is considerably weaker. This would make the period of a pendulum longer on the moon than the period of the same pendulum would be on earth.
A simple pendulum.
Because there is very little gravity there and so everything is lighter, meaning the pendulum would not swing the way it does on Earth.
If the pendulum was pushed with a large force or if it was heavier. It might swing faster.
The acceleration of a pendulum is zero at the lowest point of its swing.
By shorten the string of the pendulum
me
momentum
the period
yes