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dipmeinaluminum 11-01-2010 19:56

Trajectory analysis of a soccer ball
 
http://goff-j.web.lynchburg.edu/Goff_Carre_AJP_2009.pdf

here is a PDF of Trajectory analysis of a soccer ball by
John Eric Goff
Department of Physics, Lynchburg College, Lynchburg, Virginia 24501
Matt J. Carré
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S1 3JD, United Kingdom

enjoy :)

yoshibrock 11-01-2010 20:14

Re: Trajectory analysis of a soccer ball
 
Excellent! I was actually searching for something like this yesterday. I'm glad you were thoughtful enough to share it!

buddyb 11-01-2010 22:10

Re: Trajectory analysis of a soccer ball
 
This looks like a good read.

Thank you very much! :)

Tony.Wu 12-01-2010 09:45

Re: Trajectory analysis of a soccer ball
 
Very cool, great material!

engunneer 12-01-2010 09:56

Re: Trajectory analysis of a soccer ball
 
Cool, I passed it on to our lead Mentor, who is also the physics teacher at the school.

Passion 12-01-2010 13:54

Re: Trajectory analysis of a soccer ball
 
Very helpful, thanks in advance!

Carol 13-01-2010 14:29

Re: Trajectory analysis of a soccer ball
 
I had to post the following Dilbert cartoon in response to this thread:

http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/photos/34468

dtengineering 15-01-2010 16:21

Re: Trajectory analysis of a soccer ball
 
Here's another link.

http://www.soccerballworld.com/Physics.htm

Right now, we're estimating that we want an initial velocity for the ball of around 10m/s at about 35 degrees to give us... roughly a peak alititude of 1.5m and a flight of 4m... followed by a bounce.

Given a 10cm stroke, that should require a force of about 250N... if we have perfectly elastic collisions of hard bodies. Which... of course, we don't... but our exerimental results are indicating that this isn't a bad first order approximation.

Fiddling around with the formulas a bit more, that would be about 25 joules of work expressed in .01 seconds.... for a very brief power requirement of 2.5kw.

But that doesn't take into account the energy absorbed by the ball, air resistance, the energy required to accellerate the kicking mechanism or any of that... as interesting as the theoretical values might be, they only serve as a mechanism for understanding the empircal values in this type of situation.

Jason


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