Corked Bats and Rising Fastballs:

Post on 25-Feb-2016

36 views 5 download

description

Thanks to J. J. Crisco & R. M. Greenwald Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise 34(10): 1675-1684; Oct 2002. Corked Bats and Rising Fastballs: . Alan M. Nathan Department of Physics University of Illinois. Using Physics to Debunk Some Myths of Baseball September 23, 2006. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

transcript

1

Corked Bats and Rising Fastballs: Using Physics to Debunk Some

Myths of BaseballSeptember 23, 2006

Thanks to J. J. Crisco & R. M. GreenwaldMedicine & Science in Sports & Exercise

34(10): 1675-1684; Oct 2002

Alan M. NathanDepartment of Physics

University of Illinois

2

Corked Bats and Rising Fastballs: Using Physics to Debunk Some

Myths of Baseball

October 27, 2004:the day the curse was

broken

3

References

“Our goal is not to reform the game but to understand it.

“The physicist’s model of the game must fit the game.”

4

References

“The book is written for the inquiring layperson…”

“…many controversial claims about the game are addressed and…resolved by this book.”

5

References

http://www.npl.uiuc.edu/~a-nathan/pob

Is this heaven?

No, it’s ….Iowa

Dyersville, home of the Field of Dreams

6

Outline

• How does a baseball bat work?

• The flight of a baseball.

• Leaving the no-spin zone.

• Putting it all together.

7

Issues I Will Address• What matters more: pitch speed or bat speed?• Is the ball “juiced”?• What/where is the “sweet spot”?• Is corking the bat effective?• Does aluminum outperform wood?• Does a fastball rise?• What’s the deal with Denver?• Can a curveball be hit farther than a fastball?

8

“You can observe a lot by watching”

Champaign News-Gazette

CE Composites

--Yogi Berra

Easton Sports

9

10

When Ash Meets Cowhide• A violent collision!

– forces large (>8000 lbs!); time short (<1/1000 sec!)– ball compresses, stops, expands

• like a spring: kinetic energy potential energy• inefficient: lots of energy dissipated bat recoils, vibrates

– bat recoils, vibrates

• GOAL: maximize batted ball speed (BBS) – BBS 105 mph, 30o d 400 ft – each additional mph ~5 ft

11

What Determines BBS?• pitch speed, bat speed, “collision efficiency”• my only formula

BBS = e vpitch + (1+e) vbat

• typical numbers: e = 0.2 1+e = 1.2example: 90 + 70 gives 102 mph (~400”)

• vbat matters much more than vpitch!– Each mph of bat speed worth ~6 ft– Each mph of pitch speed worth ~1 ft

12

What does e depend on?

1. Weight and weight distribution of bat

– Heavier bat more efficient

• larger e; less recoil to bat

– Heavier bat has smaller vbat (usually)

– What is ideal bat weight?

• effect of bat weight on e is easy

• effect of bat weight on vbat harder

BBS = e vpitch + (1+e) vbat

13

Experiments to Determine vbatUse high-speed videoMeasure dependence of vbat on …

--bat weight W--“swing weight” or MOI

Conclusion: MOI matters more than WObservation: Batters prefer lighter bats—31-34 oz

--control vs. power

14

Is There an Advantage to “Corking” a Bat?

Based on best experimental data available:…for home run distance: no

…for home run frequency: maybe

15

What does e depend on?

2. Bounciness of ball– “coefficient of restitution” or COR

– COR2 = rebound ht/initial ht

– ~0.5 for baseball

demo

16

Is the Baseball “Juiced”?Is COR larger than it used

to be?

• MLB rules allow ~ 10% range of COR 35 ft• 1975 and 2004 equal to few %• No evidence for juiced ball

Measurements with high-speed cannon• COR=rebound speed/initial speed• 1975 vs. 2004

COR vs. velocity

0.4400

0.4600

0.4800

0.5000

0.5200

0.5400

0.5600

0.5800

50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130

velocity (mph)

CO

R

old 2new 13new 12old 1new 11old 3old/new

MLB specs

17demos

What does e depend on?3. Impact location on bat: the “sweet spot”

• Minimize recoil to bat—at Center of Gravity

• Maximize bat speed—at tip

• Minimize vibrations which…• sting!

• sometimes break the bat

• reduce COR lower BBS

18

The “Sweet Spot Zone”

computer simulation…which agrees with experiments

nodes CG

19

Vibrations and Broken Bats

movie0.000 5.000 10.000 15.000 20.000 25.000 30.000 35.000

pitcher

catcher

20

Aluminum has thin shell – Less mass in barrel

--lower MOI, higher bat speed, easier to control --but less effective at transferring energy --for many bats cancels

» just like corked wood bat– “Hoop modes”

• trampoline effect • “ping”

Does Aluminum Outperform Wood?

demo

21

•Two springs mutually compress each other KE PE KE

• PE shared between “ball spring” and “bat spring”• PE in ball mostly dissipated (~80%!)• PE in bat mostly restored• Net effect: less overall energy dissipated

...and therefore higher ball-bat COR…more “bounce”—confirmed by experiment…and higher BBS

• Also seen in golf, tennis, …

The “Trampoline” Effect:A Simple Physical Picture

demo

22

Does Aluminum Outperform Wood?

YES!

23

Additional Remarks on e

• can be measured in the lab– regulate non-wood bats (NCAA, ASA, …)

• “end conditions” don’t matter– Not even the batter’s hands!

24

Forces on a Baseball in Flight

• Gravity• Drag (“air resistance”)• Lift (or “Magnus”)

v

ω

mg

Fdrag

FLift

demo

25

Effect of Drag and Lift on Trajectories

• drag effect is huge

• lift effect is smaller but significant

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700distance (ft)

no drag or lift

drag, no lift drag and lift

v

ω

mg

Fd

FL (Magnus)

260

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

Range (ft)

(deg)

Range vs.

2000 rpm

0 rpm

Some Effects of Drag

• Reduced distance on fly ball

• Reduction of pitched ball speed by ~10%

• Asymmetric trajectory:– Total Distance 1.7 x

distance at apex

• Optimum home run angle ~30o-35o

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700distance (ft)

no drag or lift

drag, no lift

27

Some Effects of Lift

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700distance (ft)

no drag or lift

drag, no lift drag and lift

v

ω

mg

Fd

FL (Magnus)

• Backspin makes ball rise

– “hop” of fastball– undercut balls: increased distance, reduced

optimum angle of home run

• Topspin makes ball drop– “12-6” curveball– topped balls nose-dive

• Breaking pitches due to spin– Cutters, sliders, etc.

28

Does a Fastball Rise?

• Can a ball thrown horizontally rise?• Is there a net upward acceleration?• Can Magnus force exceed gravity?

v

ω

mg

Fd

FL (Magnus)

For this to happen…• backspin must exceed 4000 rpm

>25 revolutions • not physically possible

29

What’s the Deal with Denver?• High altitude, reduced air pressure

–80% of sea level–Reduced drag–Reduced lift

• Net effect:–Fly balls travel ~5% farther

34

Oblique Collisions:Leaving the No-Spin Zone

Oblique friction spin

Familiar Results:• Balls hit to left/right break toward foul line• Topspin gives tricky bounces in infield• Backspin keeps fly ball in air longer• Tricky popups to infield

demo

350

50

100

150

200

250

-100 0 100 200 300 400

1.5

0

0.25

0.5 0.75

1.02.0

0.75

Undercutting the ball backspin

Ball100 downward

Bat 100 upward

D = center-to-center offset

trajectories

“vertical sweet spot”

36

• Bat-Ball Collision Dynamics– A fastball will be hit faster– A curveball will be hit with more backspin

Putting it all Together:Can curveball be hit farther

than fastball?

37Net effect: backspin larger for curveball

Fastball: spin must reverse

curveball can be hit with more backspin: WHY?

Fastball with backspin

Curveball: spin doesn’t reverse

Curveball with topspin

38

• Bat-Ball Collision Dynamics– A fastball will be hit faster– A curveball will be hit with more backspin

• Aerodynamics– A ball hit faster will travel farther– Backspin increases distance

• Which effect wins?• Curveball, by a hair!

Can Curveball Travel Farther than Fastball?

39

Final Summary

• Physics of baseball is a fun application of basic (and not-so-basic) physics

• Check out my web site if you want to know more– www.npl.uiuc.edu/~a-nathan/pob– a-nathan@uiuc.edu

• Thanks for your attention and go Red Sox!