Sign In

15.8 : Simple Pendulum

A simple pendulum consists of a small diameter ball suspended from a string, which has negligible mass but is strong enough to not stretch. In our daily life, pendulums have many uses, such as in clocks, on a swing set, and on a sinker on a fishing line.

The period of a simple pendulum depends on two factors: its length and the acceleration due to gravity. The period is completely independent of any other factors, such as mass or maximum displacement. For small displacements, a pendulum is identical to a simple harmonic oscillator, and the period of a pendulum is nearly independent of amplitude, especially if θ is less than approximately 15°. Applying Newton's second law for rotational systems, the equation of motion for a pendulum is obtained.

Figure1

As an example, consider two simple pendulums suspended from small wires secured to the ceiling of a room. Each pendulum hovers 2 cm above the floor. Pendulum 1 has a bob with a mass of 10 kg. Pendulum 2 has a bob with a mass of 100 kg. Describe how the motion of the pendulums will differ if the bobs are both displaced by 12°.

Since the mass of the bob has no effect on the motion of a simple pendulum, the movement of the pendulums will not differ at all. A pendulum’s motion is only affected by the period (which is related to the pendulum’s length) and by the acceleration due to gravity.

This text is adapted from Openstax, College Physics, Section 16.4: The Simple Pendulum and Openstax, University Physics Volume 1, Section 15.4: Pendulums.

Tags
Simple PendulumPeriodLengthAcceleration Due To GravityMassMaximum DisplacementSimple Harmonic OscillatorMotion Of PendulumsNewton s Second LawRotational Systems

From Chapter 15:

article

Now Playing

15.8 : Simple Pendulum

Oscillations

4.1K Views

article

15.1 : Simple Harmonic Motion

Oscillations

7.5K Views

article

15.2 : Characteristics of Simple Harmonic Motion

Oscillations

9.4K Views

article

15.3 : Oscillations about an Equilibrium Position

Oscillations

4.8K Views

article

15.4 : Energy in Simple Harmonic Motion

Oscillations

5.8K Views

article

15.5 : Frequency of Spring-Mass System

Oscillations

4.0K Views

article

15.6 : Simple Harmonic Motion and Uniform Circular Motion

Oscillations

3.9K Views

article

15.7 : Problem Solving: Energy in Simple Harmonic Motion

Oscillations

968 Views

article

15.9 : Torsional Pendulum

Oscillations

4.8K Views

article

15.10 : Physical Pendulum

Oscillations

1.4K Views

article

15.11 : Measuring Acceleration Due to Gravity

Oscillations

331 Views

article

15.12 : Damped Oscillations

Oscillations

5.2K Views

article

15.13 : Types of Damping

Oscillations

6.0K Views

article

15.14 : Forced Oscillations

Oscillations

5.1K Views

article

15.15 : Concept of Resonance and its Characteristics

Oscillations

3.8K Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved