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Piaget's pendulum science experiment : Fizzics Education

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Piaget’s pendulum

Piaget’s pendulum

Follow FizzicsEd 150 Science Experiments:

You will need:

  • 50cm of string
  • Something to act as a mass. Metal nuts are easy to work with but you could also use dough too (if you have access to mass carriers that would be great too).
  • A stick to wind the string around – we use a retort stand for our scientific method workshop but you could anything to keep the stick steady will suffice.
  • A ruler
  • A stopwatch
  • A stack of books to act as a consistent measure of height
  • *If you have access to a sensitive scale for measuring mass you could use this too.

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Piaget pendulum experiment - materials needed
1 Piaget pendulum experiment - materials needed

Weight the metal nuts or whatever you’re using for mass in your experiment. If you can’t measure the weight of these at least make sure that you can show a significant difference in the amount of material you use for each time you repeat the experiment.

Make sure that the stick is secured to a fixed point and that you have another person ready with the stop watch.

2 Piaget pendulum experiment - adding plasticine to the pendulum bob to change the mass

Tie the string to the stick so that it can swing freely below the stick. Tie the metal nuts or whatever you’re using for a mass to the end of the string. Stack some books next to your pendulum – these will act as a constant measurement of height that you will use to release the pendulum from.

3 Piaget pendulum experiment - timing the pendulum bob swing

Pull back the mass in the same fashion that you’d pull back a chair swing to the height of the stacked books. Release the mass and record how long it takes for the pendulum to swing 5 times (also known as the period).

4

Repeat the experiment three times so that you can get results for the following combinations:

– short string/light mass
– short string/heavy mass
– long string/light mass
– long string/heavy mass

Ideally you should repeat each combination several times and calculate an average time of swing for each combination.

Is there a difference between the four combinations above? Which variable affects the period of a pendulum?

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Why does this work?

You’ve repeated an experiment that was first discussed by Galileo Galilei (1564 – 1642)! The story goes that he was watching a swinging bronze chandelier in a cathedral in Pisa and he noticed that a pendulum swing always follows the same arc. By using his own pulse he could time how long the period of the pendulum swing was. Galileo recognised that over time the swinging of the bronze chandelier would stop (conservation of energy) and that when repeating this experiment with a string and mass you could see that it was the length of the string rather than the mass that affects the period of a pendulum… i.e, the longer the string the longer the pendulum period.

For those who want to calculate what is going on, the period of oscillation of a simple pendulum is:

T = 2π√(l / g) where:

T = time period for one oscillation (s)
l = length of pendulum (m)
g = acceleration due to gravity (m/s-2)

But why does the mass have no effect on the pendulum period? Because all materials accelerate towards Earth at the same rate!

Sources of error

  • Defining when the pendulum period ends
  • Did the mass get ‘released’ or ‘pushed’?
  • The initial height of the pendulum mass needs to be consistent

Application

This simple science experiment was used by the psychologist Piaget in 1958 to determine if children could isolate and test variables one at a time to experimentally test an idea (also called formal operational thinking). Children who struggled with this experiment were found to change more than one variable at a time whilst running the pendulum experiment and as such produce the incorrect answer that it is the mass at the end of the string that influences the speed of the pendulum. It’s all about variable testing!

You can find applications of pendulums in a variety of places:

  • Foucalt’s pendulum used in demonstrating that Earth rotates.
  • On children’s swings and even on the giant swings you see at amusement parks
  • Inside a grandfather clock.
  • On a metronome.
  • Inside some skyscraper buildings to dampen the effects of earthquakes.
  • A plumb line used by builders.
  • Newton’s cradle used to demonstrate transfer of forces

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