Rotational Motion-the curve ball
The purpose of a curve ball for a pitcher is to use
it to deceive the batter. This is done by obviously making the ball
curve. How is this done, well it has to do with rotational motion
as the title of this web page implies. If you look at the picture
below you will see that this ball is thrown toward the left of the
screen with a rotation where the front of the ball (the front being the
left of the screen) is rotation toward the ground. This rotation
as
the picture shows, creates with the help of the baseball's red seems a
high pressure air system above the ball and a low pressure
air system below the ball. Pressure systems always try to reach
an equilibrium, therefore to accomplish this the high pressure system
full of a large number of air particles will try to fill the low
pressure system that has less particles with more. There is a
problem with this THE BALL IS IN THE WAY therefore in the act of
these two pressure system trying to reach equilibrium the high pressure
system exerts a force upon the ball greater then that of the low
pressure system (the Magnus Force)
therefore
the
ball
has
two
forces acting on it in the same
direction the force of gravity and the net force of the high pressure
low pressure system. These combined forces create a greater net
force acting upon the ball then when just the force of gravity is
acting upon the ball. And by looking at Newtons second law, F =
ma, it can be seen that as the F is greater with the rotation,
correspondingly the mass (m) and the acceleration (a) will increase
proportionally and because the mass (m) did not change it is easy to
see that the acceleration is what increases.
curve_ball_pic
With the determination above that the acceleration
increases it is easy to put to rest the common misconception of the
baseball "breaking" which is commonly a term used to describe the
allusion of the ball, all of a sudden, moving in the vertical
direction when before it appeared that the ball was only moving
horizontally to the ground. The
ball does not, all of a sudden,
"break" it instead it has a constant change in its velocity from the
time that it
is released from the pitcher's hand until the moment that the ball
reaches the catchers baseball mitt. It is this allusion that is
useful to the pitcher because to the untrained eye this is difficult
to hit.
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