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Showing posts with label pendulum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pendulum. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

P is for the Pendulum



Pendulums started out in clocks and were the most accurate way to measure time until the 1930’s.  The word pendulum is Latin for “pendulus” meaning hanging.  A pendulum is hung from a fixed point enabling it to swing freely back and forth due to gravity and inertia.



 Grandfather Clock Pendulum
 
Galileo first had the idea to invent a clock using a pendulum in 1602, but he never did and the world would have to wait another half century for the first pendulum clock, which was created by a Dutch scientist named Christiaan Huygens in 1665.  His clock was accurate to within one minute per day, but he later improved it to ten seconds a day.

Back in the first century the pendulum was used in seismometers to detect the direction of earthquakes.



 Pendulum in the Cathedral Metropolitan
 
In 1851 the pendulum was used to demonstrate the rotation of earth.  This was discovered by a man named Jean Bernard Leon Foucault.  Up to that point everyone depended on celestial observations.  For the next half century there was “pendulum mania” as Foucault pendulums were set up in several cities to show the rotation of the Earth.

By the 1930’s the pendulum gave way to the quartz clock.  Over the years pendulums have been made out of different materials and in different lengths.  Some clocks still use this method today, namely the grandfather clock and some mantel clocks.



 The pendulum clock in my house.  You'll notice the rubber band on the bottom.  This is to keep Raven out of there because he stops the clock playing with the pendulum.
 
But did you know that other uses evolved from the pendulum?  For instance, in religious practice the swinging incense burner called a censer, or thurible, is a version of the pendulum.

During the Spanish Inquisition in the Late Middle Ages, a pendulum device was also used to torture victims before killing them.  In place of the bob head usually found on a pendulum, an axe was attached. The victim would be strapped to a table while the axe swung back and forth gradually being lowered until it cleaved the victim’s torso.



 Divination pendulum
 
The pendulum is also used for divination and dowsing.  This is a way for getting answers to questions, such as identifying allergies, etc.  We learned a bit about this while living in California.  I’ve never seen anyone use one here for that purpose, but a lady surprised me a few weeks ago when she pulled a pendulum from her pocket to hold over one of my samples before she picked it up.  Like I said before, I’m surprised in the workplace sometimes.

In the old days, this was also a method for finding water.

Have any of you ever used a pendulum?

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Mysterious Chiming

Our chiming clock

On Sunday afternoon, the chiming wall clock we’ve had for years started working again on its own.  We heard a chime upon returning to the house.  This clock hadn’t worked in months.  A hand came off and we need to have it repaired.

We had it at a cabin we used to own where we’d go in the summertime when it was so blasted hot here where I live.  My husband found it at an estate sale years ago.

Today, after I fed the cats, I noticed Raven staring at this clock and the ticking pendulum.  After that, I noticed there was a hand on the floor (we kept the one that came off in a small compartment behind a door you open to set the pendulum).



 Raven always looks at me with the expression, "Who, me?  I didn't do anything."

There’s a half-wall there, but this cat doesn’t jump upon anything yet.  He doesn’t know he can and I’ve never caught him up there.  There’s a possibility he jumped on a chair nearby and then made a leap for the half-wall.  Perhaps he saw the brass pendulum and decided to check it out.  The door doesn’t close very tight.  Cats love anything that moves.

So the clock is working again, chiming away on the hour and half hour, except it’s fifteen minutes off and one of the hands is missing.

If Raven didn’t start the clock, we have a clock fairy that came to visit.