Sign In

15.11 : Measuring Acceleration Due to Gravity

Consider a coffee mug hanging on a hook in a pantry. If the mug gets knocked, it oscillates back and forth like a pendulum until the oscillations die out.

A simple pendulum can be described as a point mass and a string. Meanwhile, a physical pendulum is any object whose oscillations are similar to a simple pendulum, but cannot be modeled as a point mass on a string because its mass is distributed over a larger area. The behavior of a physical pendulum can be modeled using the principles of rotational motion and the concept of the moment of inertia. For both a simple and a physical pendulum, the restoring force is the force of gravity. With a simple pendulum, gravity acts on the center of the pendulum bob, while in the case of a physical pendulum, the force of gravity acts on the center of mass (CM) of the object.

The period (T) of a simple pendulum depends on its length and acceleration due to gravity (g). The period is entirely independent of other factors, such as mass and maximum displacement. Given the dependence of T on g, if the length of a pendulum and the period of oscillation is precisely known, they can be used to measure the acceleration due to gravity. This method for determining gravity can be very accurate.

A physical pendulum can also be used to measure the free-fall acceleration due to gravity at a particular location on Earth's surface, thousands of measurements of which have been made during geophysical prospecting.

Tags
Acceleration Due To GravityPendulumSimple PendulumPhysical PendulumOscillationRestoring ForceMoment Of InertiaCenter Of MassPeriod Of OscillationGeophysical Prospecting

From Chapter 15:

article

Now Playing

15.11 : Measuring Acceleration Due to Gravity

Oscillations

331 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

15.8 : Simple Pendulum

Oscillations

4.1K Views

article

15.9 : Torsional Pendulum

Oscillations

4.8K Views

article

15.10 : Physical Pendulum

Oscillations

1.4K 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