What is the free-fall acceleration in a location

where the period of a 0.594 m long pendulum
is 1.55 s s?
Answer in units of m/s^2

Show equation too please.

period=2PIsqrt(length/g)

square both sides...

T^2=(2PI)^2 l/g

g= (2PI)^2 Length/period^2

I kinda have no clue what you responded.

The equation I have is:
T=2(Pie)*Sqt(L/G)

I need to re-arrange that..

I would square it first, as I did, then rearrange.

By following your equation I got:

5.797880106

If I rearrange it would be:
T^2 = 2(Pie)L/G

then what?

You did not square 2PI.

T^2=(2pi)^2 l/g

g= (2PI)^2 l/t^2

Last question.. sorry

PL = Pie?

I keep getting the question wrong. I think I put it wrong in my caculator.

I put

(2<Pie>.594)^2.594/(1.55^2)

2PI= 6.28

(2PI)^2=about 39, check it
.594=l
1.55^2= about 2.4 check it.

g=39*.594/2.4 in my head, about 9.7 check it.

To find the free-fall acceleration in a specific location using a pendulum, you can use the equation for the period of a pendulum:

T = 2π√(L/g)

Where:
T is the period of the pendulum (in seconds),
L is the length of the pendulum (in meters), and
g is the free-fall acceleration (in m/s^2).

In this case, you are given the period of the pendulum (T = 1.55 s) and the length of the pendulum (L = 0.594 m). You need to solve the equation for g.

Rearranging the equation, we get:

g = (4π²L) / T²

Now, substitute the given values into the equation:

g = (4π² * 0.594) / (1.55)²

Calculating this expression will give you the value of g, the free-fall acceleration in m/s^2.