- #1
KingNothing
- 881
- 4
I play racquetball quite a bit as a hobby and competitively. One thing that I have noticed, and has baffled me for some time, is that on the sidewalls of a racquetball court, the ball's angle of incidence does not equal it's angle of reflection. It instead tends to (after repeated bounces) move at a normal to the wall.
See the diagram below. I am not talking about the ball hitting the floor at any given time, just the sidewalls. This is also at very fast speeds, I'm talking full-speed drive shots. Why does the ball do this? Certainly some of it is due to air resistance in the direction of the front wall, but that's got to be a small amount.
Could this be due to how the ball spins and distorts as it bounces off the sidewalls? If so, what equations govern this?
See the diagram below. I am not talking about the ball hitting the floor at any given time, just the sidewalls. This is also at very fast speeds, I'm talking full-speed drive shots. Why does the ball do this? Certainly some of it is due to air resistance in the direction of the front wall, but that's got to be a small amount.
Could this be due to how the ball spins and distorts as it bounces off the sidewalls? If so, what equations govern this?