Module 3
Planning Guide

Lab 1.9

Lesson 1.9
Lesson 1.10
Lesson 1.11
Lesson 1.12
Lab 1.9
Lab 1.10
Lab 1.11
Lab 1.12
Project 3


Physics Lab 1.10 Pendulum Projectiles

Purpose: The purpose of this experiment is to determine the speed of a pendulum at the bottom of its swing by measuring the distance traveled by a marble as it is released from the pendulum bob.

Materials and Equipment

  • Table
  • A large glass marble
  • A pendulum consisting of a small metal cradle held by two pieces of string.
    The cradle should be shaped to hold the glass marble while it swings. A slight indentation in the metal assists in keeping the marble in position. A protruding section below the cradle tips the cradle as it hits a barrier at the bottom of its swing.
  • A tape measure
  • A sheet of carbon paper & a large sheet of white paper

Procedure

  1. Mount the pendulum above the edge of the table. The bottom of the pendulum should be about 10 cm above the edge of the table at the lowest point in its swing.
  2. Place the marble inside the cradle.
  3. Pull the pendulum away from the edge of the table, measure the height of its launching position above the tabletop and allow it to swing in the direction of the edge of the table.
  4. The barrier should tip the metal hoop as it reaches the bottom of the swing. The marble should continue moving and drop to the floor.
  5. Note the region in which the marble strikes the floor. Place a piece of white paper covered with a downward facing piece of carbon paper in this part of the floor.
  6. Repeat steps 3,4 and 5 and identify the exact location where the marble strikes the floor from the carbon mark on the white paper.
  7. Measure the vertical distance from the edge of the table to the floor. Mark a point on the floor directly below the point on the edge of the table where the marble left the metal hoop.
  8. Measure the distance from this point to the point at which the marble landed.

Calculations

The speed of the marble at the lowest point of the pendulum’s swing can be calculated from the height that it was launched from.

Compare this with the distance that it traveled in the air before it hit the ground.

Assuming it was traveling horizontally when it left the metal hoop, it started accelerating towards the floor at a rate of 9.81 m/s2 as soon as it left the hoop. The time taken to reach the floor can be calculated from the equation: d = ½gt2 where d is the distance in meters (The height of the table plus the height of the hoop at its lowest point above the table), g is 9.81 m/s2 and time, t, is measured in seconds.

The speed of the marble can be calculated from the distance from the point on the floor below where it left the hoop to the point at which it landed on the floor divided by the time taken.

Results

Mass of marble = ……………grams

Height of table top above floor = ……………….cm.

Height of cradle at its lowest point – above table = ……………cm.

Height of cradle at its lowest point – above floor = …………….cm.

Time for marble to drop this distance = …….……seconds.

 

Height of cradle at launch

(cm above table top)

Horizontal distance from lowest point of cradle to point at which it landed on the floor

(cm)

Distance that cradle dropped as cradle moved to lowest point

(cm)

Gravitational potential energy of marble that was converted to kinetic energy

(Joules)

Velocity of marble at bottom of swing

(m/s)

Horizontal velocity of marble after leaving cradle

(m/s)

1            
2            
3            
4            
5            
6

30

76

20

0.01962

1.981

1.882

For the test reported on line #6 above:

Mass of marble = ………20…grams

Height of table top above floor = ………70 .cm.

Height of cradle at its lowest point – above table = ……10 cm.

Height of cradle at its lowest point – above floor = ……80 .cm.

Time for marble to drop this distance = 0.4039 seconds

Question

  1. How does the speed calculated using the time to fall to the ground compare with the speed calculated from the kinetic energy of the marble at the bottom of the pendulum’s swing?

  1. A pendulum bob with a mass of 0.2 kg has gravitational potential energy equal to 0.025 J at the highest point in it’s cycle. (Relative to it’s lowest point) What is it’s kinetic energy at the lowest point in it’s cycle?
  2. If the horizontal speed of a marble traveling through the air is 2 m/s, how far will it travel in 0.2 seconds?
  3. If an object travels 30 m in 5 seconds, what is its speed?
  4. If an object traveling horizontally has a mass of 0.2 kg and kinetic energy equal to 0.025 Joules, what is it’s speed?
  5. A marble that rolls slowly over the edge of a table accelerates towards the floor at a rate of 9.81 m/s2.
    If the equation: d = ½gt2 can be used to determine the distance, d (meters) traveled in t seconds as it falls, how far will it fall in 0.1 seconds?
  6. How long will it take for the marble to fall 0.5 meters?
  7. A marble with a mass of 20 grams is attached to a pendulum and released to swing from a height of 20cm above its lowest point. How much kinetic energy will the marble have when it reaches its lowest point?
  8. If a marble is launched horizontally from the top of a table, and the table-top is 80cm above the floor, how long will the marble spend in the air before landing on the floor?
  9. What is the horizontal speed of the marble as it leaves the table-top if it lands 40cm from a point directly below the edge of the table?

  1. 0.025Joules: Neglecting friction, all of the potential energy is converted to kinetic energy at the lowest point in the cycle of the pendulum.
  2. 0.4m: 2 m/s x 0.2 s = 0.4 m.
  3. 6 m/s: 30 m ÷ 5 s = 6 m/s.
  4. 0.5 m/s: ½mv2 = 0.025 J. v = Ö (0.025 x 2 ÷ 0.2) = 0.5 m/s.
  5. 0.0491 m: d = ½gt2 = 0.5 x 9.81 x 0.12 = 0.0491 meters.
  6. 0.319 seconds: t = Ö (0.5 x 2 ÷ 9.81m/s2) = 0.319 seconds.
  7. 0.039 J: Kinetic energy = gravitational potential energy at launch.
    Gravitational potential energy = mgh = .02 x 9.81 x .2 = 0.039 Joules.
  8. 0.404 s: d = ½gt2: t = Ö (0.8 x 2 ÷ 9.81m/s2) = 0.404 seconds.
  9. 0.99 m/s: Time spent in the air = 0.404 seconds.
    Horizontal velocity = 0.4m ÷ 0.404s = 0.99 m/s.