Golf Ghost
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2011
- Messages
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no. They don't make the money that it would take to get me to do a photoshoot up there. I am getting vertigo just looking at these pictures.
I wonder how high they would bounce if you dropped a ball off there...
That would depend highly on what it hit. I doubt it would bounce at all of you hit the water or sand down there. A concrete walkway would be a different story...
Spot the engineering student.
I'd like one of those hats.
Kevin
I wonder how high they would bounce if you dropped a ball off there...
It'd be rather hard to figure out. For moderate distances you can determine it finding potential and then kinetic energys and using Newtons laws. But at large heights air resistance starts to affect the kinetic energy, making it rather complicated to figure out.
It'd be rather hard to figure out. For moderate distances you can determine it finding potential and then kinetic energys and using Newtons laws. But at large heights air resistance starts to affect the kinetic energy, making it rather complicated to figure out.
You put more thought into that than I ever would. Tip of the hat.
Lol, you asked. So I told you!Spot the engineering student who got here a little too late for the joke to be funny.
I kid, I kid.
It'd be rather hard to figure out. For moderate distances you can determine it finding potential and then kinetic energys and using Newtons laws. But at large heights air resistance starts to affect the kinetic energy, making it rather complicated to figure out.
Couldn't you simply determine the terminal velocity, distance fallen to reach terminal velocity, total speed, then adjust bounce nmbers accordingly by factoring in both the balls and the concretes C.O.R. values?
Course, I'm the english whiz, so no clue what I am talking about.
No sir, you'd have to do some other things like determine the air resistance on a golf ball over certain distances relative to it's mass. You can use it's mass to find out what you "think" the potential and kinetic energies will be, but you'd almost have to run multiple tests of it to find out what the actual values are. If you dropped something like a bowling ball, you could probably just turn it into a simple physics problem.
Can we talk about compound complex sentences and the moral and social values of "The Catcher in the Rye" now?
No sir, you'd have to do some other things like determine the air resistance on a golf ball over certain distances relative to it's mass. You can use it's mass to find out what you "think" the potential and kinetic energies will be, but you'd almost have to run multiple tests of it to find out what the actual values are. If you dropped something like a bowling ball, you could probably just turn it into a simple physics problem.
Cool idea for a photoshoot, but I hope those arent the final shots. None of them are particularly stellar. And for a sponsor that rich, you'd figure they could atleast get the ridiculous looking astro-turf somewhat even.
Also, I think it's funny how white Rory's hand is compared to his arm from wearing a glove. And I'm sure FootJoy is enjoying him wearing Nike shoes for the shoot.