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GOLF By: Conner Almond, Kayla Lloyd, Amanda Turner, and Logan Kirkland.

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Presentation on theme: "GOLF By: Conner Almond, Kayla Lloyd, Amanda Turner, and Logan Kirkland."— Presentation transcript:

1 GOLF By: Conner Almond, Kayla Lloyd, Amanda Turner, and Logan Kirkland

2 Golf and Physics  Based on Physics golf has been trying to determine how much power or energy is required to place the ball successfully.  Golf uses power and force differently than other sports because of the way it requires muscle control and sequential movement.  The concepts on the following slides demonstrate different areas of how physics relates to golf.

3 Force = Mass x Acceleration  Acceleration is caused by an unbalanced force acting on an object.  The acceleration grows as the unbalanced force increases.  Objects with more mass are more likely to resist changing motion from force.  Newton’s second law states:  Force on an object will cause the object to accelerate in the direction of the force.  The acceleration is directly proportional to the force.  The acceleration is also inversely proportional to the mass of the object.

4 Force Applied to Golf Ball

5 Angles and Height  The distance of a golf shot depends related to the loft of the club.  Loft is the angle of the club of the clubface in relationship to a perfectly vertical clubface.  Using a longer golf club causes the angle of loft to be smaller.  The shorter the golf club, the higher the loft angle, the higher the golf balls trajectory and the shorter the golf balls flight.

6 Loft on Golf Ball

7 Distance and Velocity  The initial speed of the ball, the angle at which it is hit into the air, and spin on the ball determine the distance that the ball goes.  The distance the ball will travel is determined by the interaction between the golf club and the ball.  Maximum ball distance requires the right combination of initial velocity, initial angle of flight, and golf ball spin.

8 Well That’s not Fair------Way!

9 References  http://www.sciencescope.co.uk/force_mass_and_ac celeration.htm http://www.sciencescope.co.uk/force_mass_and_ac celeration.htm  http://www.golfspyder.com/golf-club-loft.html http://www.golfspyder.com/golf-club-loft.html  http://www.knetgolf.com/golfballdist.aspx http://www.knetgolf.com/golfballdist.aspx


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