Time When Pendulum Clock is Put on Moon?

AI Thread Summary
A pendulum clock taken to the moon, where gravity is 1.63 m/s², will run slower than on Earth due to the reduced gravitational force affecting its swing. The formula T = 2π√(l/g) is used to calculate the period of the pendulum, indicating that the clock's timekeeping will differ based on the moon's gravity. The calculations suggest that after 24 Earth hours, the clock would read approximately 10:55 A.M. on the third day. There is a consideration of whether the clock's function is influenced by the moon's rotation, but the primary focus remains on the pendulum's swing period. Overall, the problem highlights the impact of gravity on timekeeping mechanisms in different gravitational environments.
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A pendulum clock that works perfectly on Earth is taken to the moon where g = 1.63 m/s^2. If the clock is started at 12:00 A.M., what will it read on the moon 24 Earth hours?

The equation you would probably use is T = 2(pi)(sq. root of m/k)

Can someone get me started?
 
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The pendulum clock works on SHM...how is angular velocity affected by the value of 'g' with a pendulum?

Use T=2\pi\sqrt{\frac{l}{g}}are you allowed to use the value of g on earth? if so consider how you can express the acc.due to gravity on the moon in terms of 'g' on earth
 
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I don't really understand but I know that since gravity is less on the moon, the pendulum doesn't swing farther out than on Earth and therefore the clock is slower than on earth.
 
I would find the ratio so on Earth but plugging g on Earth and on the moon into T = 2(pi)(sq. root of m/k). The ratio I got for moon to Earth was .783 to .319 or 1 to 2.45455.

So 24 h x 2.45455 = 58.9092 h. So the answer would be 10:55 A.M. on the third day. Did I do this problem correctly?
 
Is it possible that this is a trick question? Doesn't a pendulum clock tell time on Earth by way of the Earth's rotation? Wouldn't a pendulum clock on the Moon depend on the Moon's rotation? And isn't the swing speed completely irrelevant?
 
I don't think it is. My physics class isn't that advanced and we usually never have any trick questions. Thanks for the input anyways. Do you think I'm doing it right?
 
well the way I intended to do it was the method with finding the ratio...so i think it would be correct...not too sure if you have to take into account the rotation of the moon and such
 
I think I did it right because my teacher has gone over anything related to the rotation so thanks! Problem solved!
 

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