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Page 1 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Baseball Aerodynamics: What do we know and how do we know it? Alan M. Nathan University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign a-nathan@uiuc.edu www.npl.uiuc.edu/~a-nathan/pob Introduction Qualitative Effects of Drag and Lift Measurements of Drag and Lift Current State of our Knowledge Summary
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Page 2 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Forces on a Spinning Baseball in Flight F d =½ C D Av 2 mg FdFd FLFL Courtesy, Popular Mechanics F L = ½ C L Av 2 direction leading edge is turning
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Page 3 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 What does C D depend on? Reynold’s Number Re= Dv/ Re~1x10 5 @ 45 mph surface “roughness” seam orientation? spin? Question: Does a baseball experience a “drag crisis”? Achenbach, J. Fl. Mech. 65, 113 (1974)
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Page 4 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 What does C L depend on? S r /v C L ~(0.5-1.5)S F L = (0.25-0.75) r 3 v Seam orientation? Reynold’s number @ fixed S?
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Page 5 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 “Straw Man” Drag and Lift more later on where these come from
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Page 6 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Effect of Drag and Lift on Trajectories drag effect is huge lift effect is smaller but significant
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Page 7 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Some Effects of Drag l Reduced distance on fly ball l Reduction of pitched ball speed by ~10% 2-seam vs. 4-seam l Asymmetric trajectory: Total Distance 1.7 x distance at apex l Optimum home run angle ~30 0 -35 0
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Page 8 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Some Effects of Lift l Backspin makes ball rise “hop” of fastball undercut balls: increased distance, reduced optimum angle of home run l Topspin makes ball drop “12-6” curveball topped balls nose-dive l Breaking pitches due to spin Cutters, sliders, etc.
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Page 9 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Additional Effects of Lift Balls hit to left/right curve toward foul pole
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Page 10 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Additional Effects of Lift: Tricky trajectories of popups --popup behind home plate with lots of backspin
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Page 11 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Drag and Lift: What do we know? How do we know it? How well do we know it? Two types of experiments: Wind tunnel Measure forces directly Video tracking of trajectory Infer forces from measured acceleration
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Page 12 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Data on C D Mehta,Briggs: wind tunnel Atlanta: video tracking Alaways: motion capture SHS: Hubbard parametrization RKA: Adair parametrizatoin Ref: 1.J. App. Biomechanics 17, 63-76 (2001) 2.Adair, The Physics of Baseball, 3 rd Ed.
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Page 13 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Denver vs. NYC: Is there a sudden drag crisis? l F d =½ C D Av 2 l Re= Av/ l Denver = 0.8 NYC l Re Denver =0.8Re NYC
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Page 14 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Data on C L Watts: wind tunnel, low speed Briggs: wind tunnel, high speed Present, Alaways: motion capture SHS: Hubbard bilinear description RKA: Adair model Ref: Am. J. Phys. 71, 1152-1162 (2003); 73, 184-189 (2005)
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Page 15 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Adair Model of Lift l Lift due to “differential drag” l C L =2C D S{1+0.5(v/C D )dC D /dv} C L S for v<50 mph Courtesy, Popular Mechanics Adair model at 100 mph
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Page 16 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Comparision of SHS and RKA Parametrizations of Drag and Lift Discrepency is huge at 70-100 mph
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Page 17 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Implications for Trajectory
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Page 18 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 New Experiment #1: Tracking Trajectory (Illinois) ATEC 2-wheel pitching machine Motion Capture System Baseball with reflecting dot
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Page 19 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Joe Hopkins ~15 ft Motion Capture Geometry
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Page 20 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Motion Capture System: 10 Eagle-4 cameras 700 frames/sec 1/2000 shutter EVaRT 4.0 software www.motionanalysis.com Pitching Machine: project horizontally 50-110 mph 1500-4500 rpm
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Page 21 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Experiment: Some Details l Motion capture: 700 fps, 1/2000 s shutter Track over ~5 m y 0.5 mm; z 13 mm with some caveats only 1 reflector assume horizontal spin axis l Pitching machine: Speeds: 50-110 mph Spins: 1500-4800 rpm Mainly topspin, some backspin All trials “two-seam” Initial angle ~0 o l Distances: 40-100 feet l Calibrations and cross-checks Simple ball toss gets a=g to 2%
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Page 22 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Typical Data
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Page 23 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Data Analysis l Nonlinear least-squares fit y(t) = y CM (t) + Acos( t+ ) z(t) = z cm (t) Asin( t+ ) l cm trajectory calculated numerically RK4 l nine free parameters y cm (0), z cm (0), v y,cm (0), v z,cm (0) A, , C L, C D
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Page 24 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Typical Data and Fit
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Page 25 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Results of Analysis: C L
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Page 26 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Conclusion: No strong dependence on Re at fixed S 0.2
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Page 27 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Results for Lift Coefficient C L F L = 1/2 AC L v 2 S=r /v 100 mph, 2000 rpm S=0.17 Conclusions: --data qualitatively consistent (~20%) --RKA model inconsistent with data
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Page 28 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Results for Drag Coefficient C D Conclusion: Major disagreements for v= 70-100 mph
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Page 29 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Experiment #2: Sportvision— A Potential New Tool l Track pitched baseballs with 2 cameras High-speed not necessary Tracking of MLB game pitches Used by ESPN for K-Zone l From trajectory, determine lift,drag,spin axis l Spin rate not measured Thanks to Marv White, CTO, for providing a wealth of data
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Page 30 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Sportvision Data batter’s view Pure backspin 180 o
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Page 31 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Sportvision Data batter’s view “cutter”: up and in to RHH 225 o
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Page 32 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Sportvision Data batter’s view “cutter”: up and away to RHH 135 o
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Page 33 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Sportvision Data warmup game pitches
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Page 34 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Sportvision Data
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Page 35 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 How Far Did That Home Run Travel? l Ball leaves bat l Hits stands D from home plate, H above ground l How far would it have gone if no obstruction?
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Page 36 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 400 ft/30 ft Range=415-455 Time can resolve 4 s 5 s 7 s See www.hittrackeronline.com
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Page 37 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Synthesis of Results
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Page 38 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Synthesis of Results Uncertainty in drag 50 ft!
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Page 39 AIAA, StL, October 19, 2006 Summary l We have much empirical knowledge of lift and drag …and some promising new tools for future research l Things we would like to know better: Better data on drag “drag crisis” Spin-dependent drag? Drag for v>100 mph Dependence of drag/lift on seam orientation? Is the spin constant?
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