Assuming that you fall asleep at exactly 8 'o' clock, you would get around 13 hours of sleep. I have never seen a wind-up alarm clock that lets you set "AM" or "PM." Most likely the alarm will sound at 9:00 PM and you will get at most one hour of sleep.
You would only get one hour of sleep. There is no am/pm setting on a wind up alarm clock.
You would get 13 hours of sleep.
actually it would be one hour of sleep because a wind up alarm clock cannot go for more then 12 hours in advance for an alarm
welllll if you went to bed at 2 o clock and you woke up at 2 o clock 5 weeks later you would have slept at least 245.99087 hours and then you would fall into a coma.....not recomended yours senserly dr greasttn
le alarm clock
An alarm clock typically converts electrical energy into mechanical energy to move the clock hands and sound the alarm. When the alarm goes off, electrical energy is converted into sound energy to produce the alarm sound.
There are many alarms clocks that make a 'bleep' sound when the alarm is activated. One such alarm clock is the Casio Compact Battery LED Beep Sound Alarm Clock.
The energy transfer for an alarm clock involves converting electrical energy into mechanical energy to activate the clock mechanism, which then releases sound energy as the alarm goes off.
In an alarm clock, electrical energy from the batteries or power source is converted into sound energy when the alarm rings. The electrical energy powers the mechanisms inside the clock to produce vibrations that create the sound waves we hear as the alarm.
If all the air is sucked out of the jar, the alarm clock will not be able to produce sound because sound requires a medium, such as air, to travel through. The alarm clock may still vibrate, but it will not create audible sound in a vacuum.
An alarm clock typically uses electrical energy to power its internal components, such as the clock mechanism, display, and alarm sound. The electrical energy is usually supplied by a battery or by being plugged into an outlet.
The problem with the wording in "Startled by the noise, the alarm clock was knocked on the floor" is that it makes it sound like the alarm clock was startled. It would be better written: "Startled by the alarm clock, I knocked it on the floor."
In an alarm clock, electrical energy from the battery or power outlet is transformed into mechanical energy to move the clock hands or generate sound energy for the alarm.
An alarm clock transforms electrical energy into mechanical energy to activate the ringing mechanism. Typically, the electrical energy powers a motor that sets the clock hands and triggers the alarm sound at the designated time.
The first alarm clock was powered by water where if the water was at a certain height, it would go off with a beeping sound.
Nearby air particles will move back and forth in the same direction as the sound waves emanating from the alarm clock. This movement of air particles creates a pressure wave that propagates through the air, carrying the sound of the alarm clock.