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Bouncing ball

The physics of a bouncing ball concerns the physical behaviour of bouncing balls, particularly its motion before, during, and after impact against the surface of another body. Several aspects of a bouncing ball's behaviour serve as an introduction to mechanics in high school or undergraduate level physics courses. However, the exact modelling of the behaviour is complex and of interest in sports engineering.

A bouncing ball. The motion is not quite parabolic due to air resistance.

The motion of a ball is generally described by projectile motion (which can be affected by gravity, drag, the Magnus effect, and buoyancy), while its impact is usually characterized through the coefficient of restitution (which can be affected by the nature of the ball, the nature of the impacting surface, the impact velocity, rotation, and local conditions such as temperature and pressure). To ensure fair play, many sports governing bodies set limits on the bounciness of their ball and forbid tampering with the ball's aerodynamic properties. The bounciness of balls has been a feature of sports as ancient as the Mesoamerican ballgame.[1]

Forces during flight and effect on motion

 
The forces acting on a spinning ball during its flight are the gravitational force (FG), the drag force (FD), the Magnus force (FM), and the buoyant force (FB).

The motion of a bouncing ball obeys projectile motion.[2][3] Many forces act on a real ball, namely the gravitational force (FG), the drag force due to air resistance (FD), the Magnus force due to the ball's spin (FM), and the buoyant force (FB). In general, one has to use Newton's second law taking all forces into account to analyze the ball's motion:

 

where m is the ball's mass. Here, a, v, r represent the ball's acceleration, velocity, and position over time t.

Gravity

 
Trajectory of a ball bouncing at an angle of 70° after impact without drag  , with Stokes drag  , and with Newton drag  .

The gravitational force is directed downwards and is equal to[4]

 

where m is the mass of the ball, and g is the gravitational acceleration, which on Earth varies between 9.764 m/s2 and 9.834 m/s2.[5] Because the other forces are usually small, the motion is often idealized as being only under the influence of gravity. If only the force of gravity acts on the ball, the mechanical energy will be conserved during its flight. In this idealized case, the equations of motion are given by

 

where a, v, and r denote the acceleration, velocity, and position of the ball, and v0 and r0 are the initial velocity and position of the ball, respectively.

More specifically, if the ball is bounced at an angle θ with the ground, the motion in the x- and y-axes (representing horizontal and vertical motion, respectively) is described by[6]

x-axis y-axis
 
 

The equations imply that the maximum height (H) and range (R) and time of flight (T) of a ball bouncing on a flat surface are given by[2][6]

 

Further refinements to the motion of the ball can be made by taking into account air resistance (and related effects such as drag and wind), the Magnus effect, and buoyancy. Because lighter balls accelerate more readily, their motion tends to be affected more by such forces.

Drag

Air flow around the ball can be either laminar or turbulent depending on the Reynolds number (Re), defined as:

 

where ρ is the density of air, μ the dynamic viscosity of air, D the diameter of the ball, and v the velocity of the ball through air. At a temperature of 20 °C, ρ = 1.2 kg/m3 and μ = 1.8×10−5 Pa·s.[7]

If the Reynolds number is very low (Re < 1), the drag force on the ball is described by Stokes' law:[8]

 

where r is the radius of the ball. This force acts in opposition to the ball's direction (in the direction of  ). For most sports balls, however, the Reynolds number will be between 104 and 105 and Stokes' law does not apply.[9] At these higher values of the Reynolds number, the drag force on the ball is instead described by the drag equation:[10]

 

where Cd is the drag coefficient, and A the cross-sectional area of the ball.

Drag will cause the ball to lose mechanical energy during its flight, and will reduce its range and height, while crosswinds will deflect it from its original path. Both effects have to be taken into account by players in sports such as golf.

Magnus effect

 
The Magnus force acting on a ball with backspin. The curly flow lines represent a turbulent wake. The airflow has been deflected in the direction of spin.
 
 
In table tennis, a skilled player can exploit the ball's spin to affect the trajectory of the ball during its flight and its reaction upon impact with a surface. With topspin, the ball reaches maximum height further into its flight (1) and then curves abruptly downwards (2). The impact propels the ball forward (3) and will tend to bounce upwards when impacting the opposing player's paddle. The situation is opposite in the case of backspin.

The spin of the ball will affect its trajectory through the Magnus effect. According to the Kutta–Joukowski theorem, for a spinning sphere with an inviscid flow of air, the Magnus force is equal to[11]

 

where r is the radius of the ball, ω the angular velocity (or spin rate) of the ball, ρ the density of air, and v the velocity of the ball relative to air. This force is directed perpendicular to the motion and perpendicular to the axis of rotation (in the direction of  ). The force is directed upwards for backspin and downwards for topspin. In reality, flow is never inviscid, and the Magnus lift is better described by[12]

 

where ρ is the density of air, CL the lift coefficient, A the cross-sectional area of the ball, and v the velocity of the ball relative to air. The lift coefficient is a complex factor which depends amongst other things on the ratio /v, the Reynolds number, and surface roughness.[12] In certain conditions, the lift coefficient can even be negative, changing the direction of the Magnus force (reverse Magnus effect).[4][13][14]

In sports like tennis or volleyball, the player can use the Magnus effect to control the ball's trajectory (e.g. via topspin or backspin) during flight. In golf, the effect is responsible for slicing and hooking which are usually a detriment to the golfer, but also helps with increasing the range of a drive and other shots.[15][16] In baseball, pitchers use the effect to create curveballs and other special pitches.[17]

Ball tampering is often illegal, and is often at the centre of cricket controversies such as the one between England and Pakistan in August 2006.[18] In baseball, the term 'spitball' refers to the illegal coating of the ball with spit or other substances to alter the aerodynamics of the ball.[19]

Buoyancy

Any object immersed in a fluid such as water or air will experience an upwards buoyancy.[20] According to Archimedes' principle, this buoyant force is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object. In the case of a sphere, this force is equal to

 

The buoyant force is usually small compared to the drag and Magnus forces and can often be neglected. However, in the case of a basketball, the buoyant force can amount to about 1.5% of the ball's weight.[20] Since buoyancy is directed upwards, it will act to increase the range and height of the ball.

Impact

 
The compression (A→B) and decompression (B→C) of a ball impacting against a surface. The force of impact is usually proportional to the compression distance, at least for small compressions, and can be modelled as a spring force.[21][22]
External video
  Florian Korn (2013). "Ball bouncing in slow motion: Rubber ball". YouTube.

When a ball impacts a surface, the surface recoils and vibrates, as does the ball, creating both sound and heat, and the ball loses kinetic energy. Additionally, the impact can impart some rotation to the ball, transferring some of its translational kinetic energy into rotational kinetic energy. This energy loss is usually characterized (indirectly) through the coefficient of restitution (or COR, denoted e):[23][note 1]

 

where vf and vi are the final and initial velocities of the ball, and uf and ui are the final and initial velocities impacting surface, respectively. In the specific case where a ball impacts on an immovable surface, the COR simplifies to

 

For a ball dropped against a floor, the COR will therefore vary between 0 (no bounce, total loss of energy) and 1 (perfectly bouncy, no energy loss). A COR value below 0 or above 1 is theoretically possible, but would indicate that the ball went through the surface (e < 0), or that the surface was not "relaxed" when the ball impacted it (e > 1), like in the case of a ball landing on spring-loaded platform.

To analyze the vertical and horizontal components of the motion, the COR is sometimes split up into a normal COR (ey), and tangential COR (ex), defined as[24]

 
 

where r and ω denote the radius and angular velocity of the ball, while R and Ω denote the radius and angular velocity the impacting surface (such as a baseball bat). In particular is the tangential velocity of the ball's surface, while is the tangential velocity of the impacting surface. These are especially of interest when the ball impacts the surface at an oblique angle, or when rotation is involved.

For a straight drop on the ground with no rotation, with only the force of gravity acting on the ball, the COR can be related to several other quantities by:[22][25]

 

Here, K and U denote the kinetic and potential energy of the ball, H is the maximum height of the ball, and T is the time of flight of the ball. The 'i' and 'f' subscript refer to the initial (before impact) and final (after impact) states of the ball. Likewise, the energy loss at impact can be related to the COR by

 

The COR of a ball can be affected by several things, mainly

  • the nature of the impacting surface (e.g. grass, concrete, wire mesh)[25][26]
  • the material of the ball (e.g. leather, rubber, plastic)[22]
  • the pressure inside the ball (if hollow)[22]
  • the amount of rotation induced in the ball at impact[27]
  • the impact velocity[21][22][26][28]

External conditions such as temperature can change the properties of the impacting surface or of the ball, making them either more flexible or more rigid. This will, in turn, affect the COR.[22] In general, the ball will deform more at higher impact velocities and will accordingly lose more of its energy, decreasing its COR.[22][28]

Spin and angle of impact

 
The forces acting on a spinning ball during impact are the force of gravity, the normal force, and the force of friction (which has in general both a 'translational' and a 'rotational' component). If the surface is angled, the force of gravity would be at an angle from the surface, while the other forces would remain perpendicular or parallel to the surface.
External video
  BiomechanicsMMU (2008). "Golf impacts - Slow motion video". YouTube.

Upon impacting the ground, some translational kinetic energy can be converted to rotational kinetic energy and vice versa depending on the ball's impact angle and angular velocity. If the ball moves horizontally at impact, friction will have a 'translational' component in the direction opposite to the ball's motion. In the figure, the ball is moving to the right, and thus it will have a translational component of friction pushing the ball to the left. Additionally, if the ball is spinning at impact, friction will have a 'rotational' component in the direction opposite to the ball's rotation. On the figure, the ball is spinning clockwise, and the point impacting the ground is moving to the left with respect to the ball's center of mass. The rotational component of friction is therefore pushing the ball to the right. Unlike the normal force and the force of gravity, these frictional forces will exert a torque on the ball, and change its angular velocity (ω).[29][30][31][32]

Three situations can arise:[32][33][34]

  1. If a ball is propelled forward with backspin, the translational and rotational friction will act in the same directions. The ball's angular velocity will be reduced after impact, as will its horizontal velocity, and the ball is propelled upwards, possibly even exceeding its original height. It is also possible for the ball to start spinning in the opposite direction, and even bounce backwards.
  2. If a ball is propelled forward with topspin, the translational and rotational friction act will act in opposite directions. What exactly happens depends on which of the two components dominate.
    1. If the ball is spinning much more rapidly than it was moving, rotational friction will dominate. The ball's angular velocity will be reduced after impact, but its horizontal velocity will be increased. The ball will be propelled forward but will not exceed its original height, and will keep spinning in the same direction.
    2. If the ball is moving much more rapidly than it was spinning, translational friction will dominate. The ball's angular velocity will be increased after impact, but its horizontal velocity will be decreased. The ball will not exceed its original height and will keep spinning in the same direction.

If the surface is inclined by some amount θ, the entire diagram would be rotated by θ, but the force of gravity would remain pointing downwards (forming an angle θ with the surface). Gravity would then have a component parallel to the surface, which would contribute to friction, and thus contribute to rotation.[32]

In racquet sports such as table tennis or racquetball, skilled players will use spin (including sidespin) to suddenly alter the ball's direction when it impacts surface, such as the ground or their opponent's racquet. Similarly, in cricket, there are various methods of spin bowling that can make the ball deviate significantly off the pitch.

Non-spherical balls

 
The forces acting on a gridiron football ball or rugby ball at impact are the force of gravity, the normal force, and the force of friction. Friction will normally have a 'longitudinal' component due to the ball's velocity and 'tumbling' spin and a 'sideways' component due to the 'on-axis' spin of the ball induced by the throw.

The bounce of an oval-shaped ball (such as those used in gridiron football or rugby football) is in general much less predictable than the bounce of a spherical ball. Depending on the ball's alignment at impact, the normal force can act ahead or behind the centre of mass of the ball, and friction from the ground will depend on the alignment of the ball, as well as its rotation, spin, and impact velocity. Where the forces act with respect to the centre of mass of the ball changes as the ball rolls on the ground, and all forces can exert a torque on the ball, including the normal force and the force of gravity. This can cause the ball to bounce forward, bounce back, or sideways. Because it is possible to transfer some rotational kinetic energy into translational kinetic energy, it is even possible for the COR to be greater than 1, or for the forward velocity of the ball to increase upon impact.[35]

Multiple stacked balls

External video
  Physics Girl (2015). "Stacked Ball Drop". YouTube.

A popular demonstration involves the bounce of multiple stacked balls. If a tennis ball is stacked on top of a basketball, and the two of them are dropped at the same time, the tennis ball will bounce much higher than it would have if dropped on its own, even exceeding its original release height.[36][37] The result is surprising as it apparently violates conservation of energy.[38] However, upon closer inspection, the basketball does not bounce as high as it would have if the tennis ball had not been on top of it, and transferred some of its energy into the tennis ball, propelling it to a greater height.[36]

The usual explanation involves considering two separate impacts: the basketball impacting with the floor, and then the basketball impacting with the tennis ball.[36][37] Assuming perfectly elastic collisions, the basketball impacting the floor at 1 m/s would rebound at 1 m/s. The tennis ball going at 1 m/s would then have a relative impact velocity of 2 m/s, which means it would rebound at 2 m/s relative to the basketball, or 3 m/s relative to the floor, and triple its rebound velocity compared to impacting the floor on its own. This implies that the ball would bounce to 9 times its original height.[note 2] In reality, due to inelastic collisions, the tennis ball will increase its velocity and rebound height by a smaller factor, but still will bounce faster and higher than it would have on its own.[37]

While the assumptions of separate impacts is not actually valid (the balls remain in close contact with each other during most of the impact), this model will nonetheless reproduce experimental results with good agreement,[37] and is often used to understand more complex phenomena such as the core collapse of supernovae,[36] or gravitational slingshot manoeuvres.[39]

Sport regulations

Several sports governing bodies regulate the bounciness of a ball through various ways, some direct, some indirect.

  • AFL: Regulates the gauge pressure of the football to be between 62 kPa and 76 kPa.[40]
  • FIBA: Regulates the gauge pressure so the basketball bounces between 1200 mm and 1400 mm (top of the ball) when it is dropped from a height of 1800 mm (bottom of the ball).[41] This roughly corresponds to a COR of 0.727 to 0.806.[note 3]
  • FIFA: Regulates the gauge pressure of the soccer ball to be between of 0.6 atm and 1.1 atm at sea level (61 to 111 kPa).[42]
  • FIVB: Regulates the gauge pressure of the volleyball to be between 0.30 kgF/cm2 to 0.325 kgF/cm2 (29.4 to 31.9 kPa) for indoor volleyball, and 0.175 kgF/cm2 to 0.225 kgF/cm2 (17.2 to 22.1 kPa) for beach volleyball.[43][44]
  • ITF: Regulates the height of the tennis ball bounce when dropped on a "smooth, rigid and horizontal block of high mass". Different types of ball are allowed for different types of surfaces. When dropped from a height of 100 inches (254 cm), the bounce must be 54–60 in (137–152 cm) for Type 1 balls, 53–58 in (135–147 cm) for Type 2 and Type 3 balls, and 48–53 in (122–135 cm) for High Altitude balls.[45] This roughly corresponds to a COR of 0.735–0.775 (Type 1 ball), 0.728–0.762 (Type 2 & 3 balls), and 0.693–0.728 (High Altitude balls) when dropped on the testing surface.[note 3]
  • ITTF: Regulates the playing surface so that the table tennis ball bounces approximately 23 cm when dropped from a height of 30 cm.[46] This roughly corresponds to a COR of about 0.876 against the playing surface.[note 3]
  • NBA: Regulates the gauge pressure of the basketball to be between 7.5 and 8.5 psi (51.7 to 58.6 kPa).[47]
  • NFL: Regulates the gauge pressure of the American football to be between 12.5 and 13.5 psi (86 to 93 kPa).[48]
  • R&A/USGA: Limits the COR of the golf ball directly, which should not exceed 0.83 against a golf club.[49]

The pressure of an American football was at the center of the deflategate controversy.[50][51] Some sports do not regulate the bouncing properties of balls directly, but instead specify a construction method. In baseball, the introduction of a cork-based ball helped to end the dead-ball era and trigger the live-ball era.[52][53]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Here, v and u are not just the magnitude of velocities, but include also their direction (sign).
  2. ^ Since conservation of mechanical energy implies  , then   is proportional to  .
  3. ^ a b c Calculated using   and (if applicable) the diameter of the ball. The calculation assumes air resistance is negligible.

References

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Further reading

bouncing, ball, balls, referred, bouncy, balls, bouncy, ball, device, used, video, recording, indicate, rhythm, song, bouncing, ball, music, computer, virus, bouncing, ball, virus, physics, bouncing, ball, concerns, physical, behaviour, bouncing, balls, partic. For balls referred to as bouncy balls see bouncy ball For the device used in video recording to indicate the rhythm of a song see bouncing ball music For the computer virus see Bouncing Ball virus The physics of a bouncing ball concerns the physical behaviour of bouncing balls particularly its motion before during and after impact against the surface of another body Several aspects of a bouncing ball s behaviour serve as an introduction to mechanics in high school or undergraduate level physics courses However the exact modelling of the behaviour is complex and of interest in sports engineering A bouncing ball The motion is not quite parabolic due to air resistance The motion of a ball is generally described by projectile motion which can be affected by gravity drag the Magnus effect and buoyancy while its impact is usually characterized through the coefficient of restitution which can be affected by the nature of the ball the nature of the impacting surface the impact velocity rotation and local conditions such as temperature and pressure To ensure fair play many sports governing bodies set limits on the bounciness of their ball and forbid tampering with the ball s aerodynamic properties The bounciness of balls has been a feature of sports as ancient as the Mesoamerican ballgame 1 Contents 1 Forces during flight and effect on motion 1 1 Gravity 1 2 Drag 1 3 Magnus effect 1 4 Buoyancy 2 Impact 2 1 Spin and angle of impact 2 2 Non spherical balls 2 3 Multiple stacked balls 3 Sport regulations 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further readingForces during flight and effect on motion EditNote In this article vectors are indicated in bold while magnitudes and scalar quantities are indicated in italics The forces acting on a spinning ball during its flight are the gravitational force FG the drag force FD the Magnus force FM and the buoyant force FB The motion of a bouncing ball obeys projectile motion 2 3 Many forces act on a real ball namely the gravitational force FG the drag force due to air resistance FD the Magnus force due to the ball s spin FM and the buoyant force FB In general one has to use Newton s second law taking all forces into account to analyze the ball s motion F m a F G F D F M F B m a m d v d t m d 2 r d t 2 displaystyle begin aligned sum mathbf F amp m mathbf a mathbf F text G mathbf F text D mathbf F text M mathbf F text B amp m mathbf a m frac d mathbf v dt m frac d 2 mathbf r dt 2 end aligned where m is the ball s mass Here a v r represent the ball s acceleration velocity and position over time t Gravity Edit Main article Gravity Trajectory of a ball bouncing at an angle of 70 after impact without drag with Stokes drag and with Newton drag The gravitational force is directed downwards and is equal to 4 F G m g displaystyle F text G mg where m is the mass of the ball and g is the gravitational acceleration which on Earth varies between 9 764 m s2 and 9 834 m s2 5 Because the other forces are usually small the motion is often idealized as being only under the influence of gravity If only the force of gravity acts on the ball the mechanical energy will be conserved during its flight In this idealized case the equations of motion are given by a g j v v 0 a t r r 0 v 0 t 1 2 a t 2 displaystyle begin aligned mathbf a amp g mathbf hat j mathbf v amp mathbf v text 0 mathbf a t mathbf r amp mathbf r 0 mathbf v 0 t frac 1 2 mathbf a t 2 end aligned where a v and r denote the acceleration velocity and position of the ball and v0 and r0 are the initial velocity and position of the ball respectively More specifically if the ball is bounced at an angle 8 with the ground the motion in the x and y axes representing horizontal and vertical motion respectively is described by 6 x axis y axisa x 0 v x v 0 cos 8 x x 0 v 0 cos 8 t displaystyle begin aligned a text x amp 0 v text x amp v 0 cos left theta right x amp x 0 v 0 cos left theta right t end aligned a y g v y v 0 sin 8 g t y y 0 v 0 sin 8 t 1 2 g t 2 displaystyle begin aligned a text y amp g v text y amp v 0 sin left theta right gt y amp y 0 v 0 sin left theta right t frac 1 2 gt 2 end aligned The equations imply that the maximum height H and range R and time of flight T of a ball bouncing on a flat surface are given by 2 6 H v 0 2 2 g sin 2 8 R v 0 2 g sin 2 8 and T 2 v 0 g sin 8 displaystyle begin aligned H amp frac v 0 2 2g sin 2 left theta right R amp frac v 0 2 g sin left 2 theta right text and T amp frac 2v 0 g sin left theta right end aligned Further refinements to the motion of the ball can be made by taking into account air resistance and related effects such as drag and wind the Magnus effect and buoyancy Because lighter balls accelerate more readily their motion tends to be affected more by such forces Drag Edit Main article Drag physics Air flow around the ball can be either laminar or turbulent depending on the Reynolds number Re defined as Re r D v m displaystyle text Re frac rho Dv mu where r is the density of air m the dynamic viscosity of air D the diameter of the ball and v the velocity of the ball through air At a temperature of 20 C r 1 2 kg m3 and m 1 8 10 5 Pa s 7 If the Reynolds number is very low Re lt 1 the drag force on the ball is described by Stokes law 8 F D 6 p m r v displaystyle F text D 6 pi mu rv where r is the radius of the ball This force acts in opposition to the ball s direction in the direction of v displaystyle textstyle hat mathbf v For most sports balls however the Reynolds number will be between 104 and 105 and Stokes law does not apply 9 At these higher values of the Reynolds number the drag force on the ball is instead described by the drag equation 10 F D 1 2 r C d A v 2 displaystyle F text D frac 1 2 rho C text d Av 2 where Cd is the drag coefficient and A the cross sectional area of the ball Drag will cause the ball to lose mechanical energy during its flight and will reduce its range and height while crosswinds will deflect it from its original path Both effects have to be taken into account by players in sports such as golf Magnus effect Edit Main article Magnus effect The Magnus force acting on a ball with backspin The curly flow lines represent a turbulent wake The airflow has been deflected in the direction of spin In table tennis a skilled player can exploit the ball s spin to affect the trajectory of the ball during its flight and its reaction upon impact with a surface With topspin the ball reaches maximum height further into its flight 1 and then curves abruptly downwards 2 The impact propels the ball forward 3 and will tend to bounce upwards when impacting the opposing player s paddle The situation is opposite in the case of backspin The spin of the ball will affect its trajectory through the Magnus effect According to the Kutta Joukowski theorem for a spinning sphere with an inviscid flow of air the Magnus force is equal to 11 F M 8 3 p r 3 r w v displaystyle F text M frac 8 3 pi r 3 rho omega v where r is the radius of the ball w the angular velocity or spin rate of the ball r the density of air and v the velocity of the ball relative to air This force is directed perpendicular to the motion and perpendicular to the axis of rotation in the direction of w v displaystyle textstyle hat mathbf omega times hat mathbf v The force is directed upwards for backspin and downwards for topspin In reality flow is never inviscid and the Magnus lift is better described by 12 F M 1 2 r C L A v 2 displaystyle F text M frac 1 2 rho C text L Av 2 where r is the density of air CL the lift coefficient A the cross sectional area of the ball and v the velocity of the ball relative to air The lift coefficient is a complex factor which depends amongst other things on the ratio rw v the Reynolds number and surface roughness 12 In certain conditions the lift coefficient can even be negative changing the direction of the Magnus force reverse Magnus effect 4 13 14 In sports like tennis or volleyball the player can use the Magnus effect to control the ball s trajectory e g via topspin or backspin during flight In golf the effect is responsible for slicing and hooking which are usually a detriment to the golfer but also helps with increasing the range of a drive and other shots 15 16 In baseball pitchers use the effect to create curveballs and other special pitches 17 Ball tampering is often illegal and is often at the centre of cricket controversies such as the one between England and Pakistan in August 2006 18 In baseball the term spitball refers to the illegal coating of the ball with spit or other substances to alter the aerodynamics of the ball 19 Buoyancy Edit Main article Buoyancy Any object immersed in a fluid such as water or air will experience an upwards buoyancy 20 According to Archimedes principle this buoyant force is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object In the case of a sphere this force is equal to F B 4 3 p r 3 r g displaystyle F text B frac 4 3 pi r 3 rho g The buoyant force is usually small compared to the drag and Magnus forces and can often be neglected However in the case of a basketball the buoyant force can amount to about 1 5 of the ball s weight 20 Since buoyancy is directed upwards it will act to increase the range and height of the ball Impact Edit The compression A B and decompression B C of a ball impacting against a surface The force of impact is usually proportional to the compression distance at least for small compressions and can be modelled as a spring force 21 22 External video Florian Korn 2013 Ball bouncing in slow motion Rubber ball YouTube When a ball impacts a surface the surface recoils and vibrates as does the ball creating both sound and heat and the ball loses kinetic energy Additionally the impact can impart some rotation to the ball transferring some of its translational kinetic energy into rotational kinetic energy This energy loss is usually characterized indirectly through the coefficient of restitution or COR denoted e 23 note 1 e v f u f v i u i displaystyle e frac v text f u text f v text i u text i where vf and vi are the final and initial velocities of the ball and uf and ui are the final and initial velocities impacting surface respectively In the specific case where a ball impacts on an immovable surface the COR simplifies to e v f v i displaystyle e frac v text f v text i For a ball dropped against a floor the COR will therefore vary between 0 no bounce total loss of energy and 1 perfectly bouncy no energy loss A COR value below 0 or above 1 is theoretically possible but would indicate that the ball went through the surface e lt 0 or that the surface was not relaxed when the ball impacted it e gt 1 like in the case of a ball landing on spring loaded platform To analyze the vertical and horizontal components of the motion the COR is sometimes split up into a normal COR ey and tangential COR ex defined as 24 e y v yf u yf v yi u yi displaystyle e text y frac v text yf u text yf v text yi u text yi e x v xf r w f u xf R W f v xi r w i u xi R W i displaystyle e text x frac v text xf r omega text f u text xf R Omega text f v text xi r omega text i u text xi R Omega text i where r and w denote the radius and angular velocity of the ball while R and W denote the radius and angular velocity the impacting surface such as a baseball bat In particular rw is the tangential velocity of the ball s surface while RW is the tangential velocity of the impacting surface These are especially of interest when the ball impacts the surface at an oblique angle or when rotation is involved For a straight drop on the ground with no rotation with only the force of gravity acting on the ball the COR can be related to several other quantities by 22 25 e v f v i K f K i U f U i H f H i T f T i g T f 2 8 H i displaystyle e left frac v text f v text i right sqrt frac K text f K text i sqrt frac U text f U text i sqrt frac H text f H text i frac T text f T text i sqrt frac gT text f 2 8H text i Here K and U denote the kinetic and potential energy of the ball H is the maximum height of the ball and T is the time of flight of the ball The i and f subscript refer to the initial before impact and final after impact states of the ball Likewise the energy loss at impact can be related to the COR by Energy Loss K i K f K i 100 1 e 2 100 displaystyle text Energy Loss frac K text i K text f K text i times 100 left 1 e 2 right times 100 The COR of a ball can be affected by several things mainly the nature of the impacting surface e g grass concrete wire mesh 25 26 the material of the ball e g leather rubber plastic 22 the pressure inside the ball if hollow 22 the amount of rotation induced in the ball at impact 27 the impact velocity 21 22 26 28 External conditions such as temperature can change the properties of the impacting surface or of the ball making them either more flexible or more rigid This will in turn affect the COR 22 In general the ball will deform more at higher impact velocities and will accordingly lose more of its energy decreasing its COR 22 28 Spin and angle of impact Edit The forces acting on a spinning ball during impact are the force of gravity the normal force and the force of friction which has in general both a translational and a rotational component If the surface is angled the force of gravity would be at an angle from the surface while the other forces would remain perpendicular or parallel to the surface External video BiomechanicsMMU 2008 Golf impacts Slow motion video YouTube Upon impacting the ground some translational kinetic energy can be converted to rotational kinetic energy and vice versa depending on the ball s impact angle and angular velocity If the ball moves horizontally at impact friction will have a translational component in the direction opposite to the ball s motion In the figure the ball is moving to the right and thus it will have a translational component of friction pushing the ball to the left Additionally if the ball is spinning at impact friction will have a rotational component in the direction opposite to the ball s rotation On the figure the ball is spinning clockwise and the point impacting the ground is moving to the left with respect to the ball s center of mass The rotational component of friction is therefore pushing the ball to the right Unlike the normal force and the force of gravity these frictional forces will exert a torque on the ball and change its angular velocity w 29 30 31 32 Three situations can arise 32 33 34 If a ball is propelled forward with backspin the translational and rotational friction will act in the same directions The ball s angular velocity will be reduced after impact as will its horizontal velocity and the ball is propelled upwards possibly even exceeding its original height It is also possible for the ball to start spinning in the opposite direction and even bounce backwards If a ball is propelled forward with topspin the translational and rotational friction act will act in opposite directions What exactly happens depends on which of the two components dominate If the ball is spinning much more rapidly than it was moving rotational friction will dominate The ball s angular velocity will be reduced after impact but its horizontal velocity will be increased The ball will be propelled forward but will not exceed its original height and will keep spinning in the same direction If the ball is moving much more rapidly than it was spinning translational friction will dominate The ball s angular velocity will be increased after impact but its horizontal velocity will be decreased The ball will not exceed its original height and will keep spinning in the same direction If the surface is inclined by some amount 8 the entire diagram would be rotated by 8 but the force of gravity would remain pointing downwards forming an angle 8 with the surface Gravity would then have a component parallel to the surface which would contribute to friction and thus contribute to rotation 32 In racquet sports such as table tennis or racquetball skilled players will use spin including sidespin to suddenly alter the ball s direction when it impacts surface such as the ground or their opponent s racquet Similarly in cricket there are various methods of spin bowling that can make the ball deviate significantly off the pitch Non spherical balls Edit The forces acting on a gridiron football ball or rugby ball at impact are the force of gravity the normal force and the force of friction Friction will normally have a longitudinal component due to the ball s velocity and tumbling spin and a sideways component due to the on axis spin of the ball induced by the throw The bounce of an oval shaped ball such as those used in gridiron football or rugby football is in general much less predictable than the bounce of a spherical ball Depending on the ball s alignment at impact the normal force can act ahead or behind the centre of mass of the ball and friction from the ground will depend on the alignment of the ball as well as its rotation spin and impact velocity Where the forces act with respect to the centre of mass of the ball changes as the ball rolls on the ground and all forces can exert a torque on the ball including the normal force and the force of gravity This can cause the ball to bounce forward bounce back or sideways Because it is possible to transfer some rotational kinetic energy into translational kinetic energy it is even possible for the COR to be greater than 1 or for the forward velocity of the ball to increase upon impact 35 Multiple stacked balls Edit External video Physics Girl 2015 Stacked Ball Drop YouTube A popular demonstration involves the bounce of multiple stacked balls If a tennis ball is stacked on top of a basketball and the two of them are dropped at the same time the tennis ball will bounce much higher than it would have if dropped on its own even exceeding its original release height 36 37 The result is surprising as it apparently violates conservation of energy 38 However upon closer inspection the basketball does not bounce as high as it would have if the tennis ball had not been on top of it and transferred some of its energy into the tennis ball propelling it to a greater height 36 The usual explanation involves considering two separate impacts the basketball impacting with the floor and then the basketball impacting with the tennis ball 36 37 Assuming perfectly elastic collisions the basketball impacting the floor at 1 m s would rebound at 1 m s The tennis ball going at 1 m s would then have a relative impact velocity of 2 m s which means it would rebound at 2 m s relative to the basketball or 3 m s relative to the floor and triple its rebound velocity compared to impacting the floor on its own This implies that the ball would bounce to 9 times its original height note 2 In reality due to inelastic collisions the tennis ball will increase its velocity and rebound height by a smaller factor but still will bounce faster and higher than it would have on its own 37 While the assumptions of separate impacts is not actually valid the balls remain in close contact with each other during most of the impact this model will nonetheless reproduce experimental results with good agreement 37 and is often used to understand more complex phenomena such as the core collapse of supernovae 36 or gravitational slingshot manoeuvres 39 Sport regulations EditSee also Regulation of sport Several sports governing bodies regulate the bounciness of a ball through various ways some direct some indirect AFL Regulates the gauge pressure of the football to be between 62 kPa and 76 kPa 40 FIBA Regulates the gauge pressure so the basketball bounces between 1200 mm and 1400 mm top of the ball when it is dropped from a height of 1800 mm bottom of the ball 41 This roughly corresponds to a COR of 0 727 to 0 806 note 3 FIFA Regulates the gauge pressure of the soccer ball to be between of 0 6 atm and 1 1 atm at sea level 61 to 111 kPa 42 FIVB Regulates the gauge pressure of the volleyball to be between 0 30 kgF cm2 to 0 325 kgF cm2 29 4 to 31 9 kPa for indoor volleyball and 0 175 kgF cm2 to 0 225 kgF cm2 17 2 to 22 1 kPa for beach volleyball 43 44 ITF Regulates the height of the tennis ball bounce when dropped on a smooth rigid and horizontal block of high mass Different types of ball are allowed for different types of surfaces When dropped from a height of 100 inches 254 cm the bounce must be 54 60 in 137 152 cm for Type 1 balls 53 58 in 135 147 cm for Type 2 and Type 3 balls and 48 53 in 122 135 cm for High Altitude balls 45 This roughly corresponds to a COR of 0 735 0 775 Type 1 ball 0 728 0 762 Type 2 amp 3 balls and 0 693 0 728 High Altitude balls when dropped on the testing surface note 3 ITTF Regulates the playing surface so that the table tennis ball bounces approximately 23 cm when dropped from a height of 30 cm 46 This roughly corresponds to a COR of about 0 876 against the playing surface note 3 NBA Regulates the gauge pressure of the basketball to be between 7 5 and 8 5 psi 51 7 to 58 6 kPa 47 NFL Regulates the gauge pressure of the American football to be between 12 5 and 13 5 psi 86 to 93 kPa 48 R amp A USGA Limits the COR of the golf ball directly which should not exceed 0 83 against a golf club 49 The pressure of an American football was at the center of the deflategate controversy 50 51 Some sports do not regulate the bouncing properties of balls directly but instead specify a construction method In baseball the introduction of a cork based ball helped to end the dead ball era and trigger the live ball era 52 53 See also EditBouncy ball List of ball gamesNotes Edit Here v and u are not just the magnitude of velocities but include also their direction sign Since conservation of mechanical energy implies 1 2 m v f 2 m g H f displaystyle textstyle frac 1 2 mv text f 2 mgH text f then H f displaystyle textstyle H text f is proportional to v f 2 displaystyle v text f 2 a b c Calculated using e H f H i displaystyle textstyle e sqrt frac H text f H text i and if applicable the diameter of the ball The calculation assumes air resistance is negligible References Edit Whittington E M ed 2001 The Sport of Life and Death The Mesoamerican Ballgame Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05108 9 a b Brancazio P J 1985 Trajectory of a fly ball The Physics Teacher 23 1 20 23 Bibcode 1985PhTea 23 20B doi 10 1119 1 2341702 Walker J 2014 Fundamentals of Physics 10th Extended ed John Wiley amp Sons Figure 4 8 p 70 ISBN 978 1 118 23072 5 a b Bush J W M 2013 The aerodynamics of the beautiful game PDF In Clanet C ed Sports Physics Les Editions de l Ecole Polytechnique p 171 hdl 1721 1 87576 ISBN 978 2 7302 1615 9 Hirt C Claessens S Fecher T Kuhn M Pail R Rexer M 2013 New ultrahigh resolution picture of Earth s gravity field Geophysical Research Letters 40 16 4279 4283 Bibcode 2013GeoRL 40 4279H doi 10 1002 grl 50838 a b Nave R Trajectories HyperPhysics Retrieved 2017 01 27 Dry air properties The Engineering Toolbox Retrieved 2017 02 11 Southard J Fall 2006 Chapter 3 Flow past a sphere II Stoke s law the Bernoulli equation turbulence boundary layers flow separation PDF Special Topics An Introduction to Fluid Motions Sediment Transport and Current generated Sedimentary Structures MIT pp 35 82 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 02 05 Metha R D 2008 Sports ball aerodynamics In Norstrud H ed Sport Aerodynamics CISM International Centre for Mechanical Sciences Vol 506 Springer pp 229 331 doi 10 1007 978 3 211 89297 8 12 ISBN 978 3 211 89296 1 Drag of a sphere NASA Ideal lift of a spinning ball NASA Retrieved 2017 02 02 a b Nathan A M 2008 The effect of spin on the flight of a baseball PDF American Journal of Physics 76 2 119 124 arXiv physics 0605041 Bibcode 2008AmJPh 76 119N doi 10 1119 1 2805242 S2CID 15494386 Kim J Park H Choi H Yoo J Y 2011 Inverse Magnus effect on a rotating sphere PDF 64th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics American Physical Society Bibcode 2011APS DFD A7008K Kim J Choi H Park H Yoo J Y 2014 Inverse Magnus effect on a rotating sphere When and why Journal of Fluid Mechanics 754 R2 Bibcode 2014JFM 754R 2K doi 10 1017 jfm 2014 428 S2CID 122453684 Magnus effect HumanKinetics com 2008 11 11 Retrieved 2017 01 27 DeForest C 1997 Why are golf balls dimpled The Original Usenet Physics FAQ Archived from the original on 2019 07 23 Retrieved 2017 01 27 Clanet C 2015 Sports ballistics PDF Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics 47 455 478 Bibcode 2015AnRFM 47 455C doi 10 1146 annurev fluid 010313 141255 Inzamam charged by ICC The Guardian 21 August 2006 Retrieved 2017 01 28 Okrent D Wulf S 1989 Baseball anecdotes Oxford University Press p 89 ISBN 978 0 19 504396 9 a b Post S 2010 Applied and computational fluid mechanics Jones and Bartlett Publishers pp 280 282 ISBN 978 1 934015 47 6 a b Cross R 1999 The bounce of a ball PDF American Journal of Physics 67 3 222 227 Bibcode 1999AmJPh 67 222C doi 10 1119 1 19229 a b c d e f g Georgallas A Landry G 2016 The coefficient of restitution of pressurized balls A mechanistic model Canadian Journal of Physics 94 1 42 Bibcode 2016CaJPh 94 42G doi 10 1139 cjp 2015 0378 hdl 1807 69855 Coefficient of restitution RacquetResearch com Archived from the original on 2016 11 23 Retrieved 2017 01 27 Cross R Nathan A M 2006 Scattering of a baseball by a bat American Journal of Physics 74 10 896 904 arXiv physics 0605040 Bibcode 2006AmJPh 74 896C doi 10 1119 1 2209246 S2CID 15488042 a b Haron A Ismail K A 2012 Coefficient of restitution of sports balls A normal drop test IOP Conference Series Materials Science and Engineering 36 1 012038 Bibcode 2012MS amp E 36a2038H doi 10 1088 1757 899X 36 1 012038 a b Cross R 2000 The coefficient of restitution for collisions of happy balls unhappy balls and tennis balls PDF American Journal of Physics 68 11 1025 1031 Bibcode 2000AmJPh 68 1025C doi 10 1119 1 1285945 Cross R 2002 Grip slip behavior of a bouncing ball PDF American Journal of Physics 70 11 1093 1102 Bibcode 2002AmJPh 70 1093C doi 10 1119 1 1507792 a b Zhang X Vu Quoc L 2002 Modeling the dependence of the coefficient of restitution on the impact velocity in elasto plastic collisions International Journal of Impact Engineering 27 3 317 341 doi 10 1016 S0734 743X 01 00052 5 Hesser Knoll M 2014 Ball spin during bounce The Physics of Tennis University of Alaska Fairbanks Retrieved 2017 02 01 Lindsey C April 2004 Follow the bouncing ball Tennis Industry Retrieved 2017 02 01 Allen T Haake S Goodwill S 2010 Effect of friction on tennis ball impacts Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers Part P 224 3 229 236 doi 10 1243 17543371JSET66 a b c Cross R 2005 Bounce of a spinning ball near normal incidence PDF American Journal of Physics 73 10 914 920 Bibcode 2005AmJPh 73 914C doi 10 1119 1 2008299 Allen T 2012 The ball s in your court PDF ANSYS Advantage Web exclusive Archived from the original PDF on 2017 02 05 Jafri S M M 2004 Modeling of impact dynamics of a tennis ball with a flat surface PDF Thesis Texas A amp M University hdl 1969 1 2441 Cross R 2011 Bounce of an oval shaped football PDF Sports Technology 3 3 168 180 doi 10 1080 19346182 2011 564283 S2CID 108409393 a b c d Huebner J S Smith T L 1992 Multi ball collisions The Physics Teacher 30 1 46 Bibcode 1992PhTea 30 46H doi 10 1119 1 2343467 a b c d Cross R 2007 Vertical bounce of two vertically aligned balls PDF American Journal of Physics 75 11 1009 1016 Bibcode 2007AmJPh 75 1009C doi 10 1119 1 2772286 Harter W G 1971 Velocity amplification in collision experiments involving superballs PDF American Journal of Physics 39 6 656 663 Bibcode 1971AmJPh 39 656H doi 10 1119 1 1986253 Nave R Double ball drop HyperPhysics Retrieved 2017 01 28 Laws of Australian Football 2017 PDF AFL 2017 p 15 Retrieved 2018 01 19 Official Basketball Rules 2014 Basketball Equipment PDF FIBA 2014 p 12 Laws of the Game 2014 15 PDF FIFA 2014 p 15 Official Volleyball Rules 2017 2020 PDF FIVB 2016 p 16 Official Beach Volleyball Rules 2017 2020 PDF FIVB 2017 p 15 ITF Approved Tennis Balls Classified Surfaces amp Recognized Courts PDF ITF 2016 pp 4 5 The International Table Tennis Federation Handbook PDF ITTF 2017 p 24 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 04 24 Retrieved 2017 10 20 Official Rules of the National Basketball Association 2013 2014 PDF NBA 2013 p 10 Official Playing Rules of the National Football League PDF NFL 2016 p 3 Rubenstein L 11 May 2002 Getting to COR of game finally The Globe and Mail Retrieved 2017 01 27 Botelho G Castillo M 11 May 2015 Deflategate 4 game suspension for Tom Brady CNN Retrieved 2017 01 27 Well Jr T V Karp B S Reisner L L 2015 Investigative Report Concerning Footballs Used During the AFC Championship Game on January 18 2015 PDF Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton amp Garrison LLP Evolution of the ball Baseball Digest 67 July 1963 Sowell T 2011 Dead ball vs lively ball The Thomas Sowell Reader Basic Books ISBN 9780465022502 Further reading EditBriggs L J 1945 Methods for measuring the coefficient of restitution and the spin of a ball Journal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards 34 1 1 23 doi 10 6028 jres 034 001 Cross R 2011 Physics of Baseball amp Softball Springer ISBN 978 1 4419 8112 7 Cross R June 2014 Physics of bounce Sydney University Cross R 2015 Behaviour of a bouncing ball Physics Education 50 3 335 341 Bibcode 2015PhyEd 50 335C doi 10 1088 0031 9120 50 3 335 S2CID 122366736 Stronge W J 2004 Impact mechanics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 60289 1 Erlichson Herman 1983 Maximum projectile range with drag and lift with particular application to golf American Journal of Physics 51 4 357 362 Bibcode 1983AmJPh 51 357E doi 10 1119 1 13248 Retrieved 29 April 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bouncing ball amp oldid 1155135530, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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