Simple Pendulum Motion and Physical Pendulum

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the period of a pendulum in various elevator scenarios. For a stationary elevator, the standard formula applies, using gravity as the sole acceleration. In cases where the elevator is moving at constant speed, the acceleration remains equal to gravity. However, when the elevator accelerates, the effective acceleration changes, requiring adjustments to the formula. The key takeaway is that upward acceleration increases the effective gravitational force, while downward acceleration decreases it, impacting the pendulum's period.
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Homework Statement


1) Find the period of a pendulum 50 cm long when it is suspended in (a) a stationary elevator; (b) an elevator falling at the constant speed of 5.0 m/s; (c) an elevator falling at the constant acceleration of 2.0 m/s2; (d) an elevator rising at the constant speed of 5.0 m/s; (e) an elevator rising at the constant acceleration of 2.0 m/s2.

Homework Equations


Period = 2 pi Squareroot of Length of arm/ Gravity

The Attempt at a Solution


1) I could solve a) by simply replacing data into the formula, but I am not sure how does the change in velocity and acceleration affects the data that is where I am stuck at.
 
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A force has to be introduced to change the period.

Constant motion doesn't introduce force, only acceleration does.
 
so that means that when the velocity is up or down 5m/s constat there is no acceleartion, so only G is taken into account?
but for the toher two, how are they calculated?
 
Gravity is an acceleration... the period is actually

P = 2*pi*sqrt(L/a)

where a is acceleration.

Gravity is always there, but in acceleration situations a will not simply be equal to G as it is in the stationary and constant motion situation.
 
Yes i understand that part, but what i don't know is how does the up and down acceleration influence the total acceleration, this is just a hunch but i think that when acceleration is downward i would be 7.81, and when it is upward it will be 11.81, I am not totally sure about that
As for the ones where velocity is constant i think that the only acceleration acting is gravity, and I am not sure of that either..
 
You are correct. The acceleration of the elevator adds (or subtracts) from the standard acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s^2).
 
ok thanks very much
 
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