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VIII.—On Impact

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2013

Extract

The present inquiry is closely connected with some of the phenomena presented in golf:—especially the fact that a ball can be “jerked” nearly as far as it can be “driven.” For this, in itself, furnishes a complete proof that the duration of the impact is exceedingly short. But it does not appear that any accurate determination of the duration can be made in this way. Measurements, even of a rude kind, are impracticable under the circumstances.

In 1887 I made a number of preliminary experiments with the view of devising a form of apparatus which should trace a permanent record of the circumstances of impact. I found that it was necessary that one of the two impinging bodies should be fixed:—at least if the apparatus were to be at once simple and manageable. This arrangement gives, of course, a result not directly comparable with the behaviour of a golf-ball. For pressure is applied to one side only, both of ball and of club; but when one of two impinging bodies is fixed it is virtually struck simultaneously on both sides.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1892

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