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Bob Jewett said:I assume that the smiley means that you're kidding and you don't know of any reference that Einstein really made to pool.
It sure could.PKM said:I think someone asked this before and never got a response, but does anyone have a link to information about this Einstein discovery? I was unable to find anything, and I find it hard to believe it wouldn't be documented somewhere on the Internet. Could this be a myth?
mikepage said:Well I'm still hoping there is a reference.
But I did notice there's no hyphen between "receding" and "sphere." Maybe, just maybe, we're not reading it correctly. Maybe it's not the sphere that's receding?
It could be receding modifies the second word, like in
"receding Nawlins crawdad."
Scott Lee said:Don...Einstein figured out in 1918 that there are 6 million shots and angles on a 9' pool table. Fortunately only 6 go to a pocket. If you have a repeatable stroke ANY aiming system will work for you. If you don't, NO aiming system will work. For SAM to work you have to believe it will...I do, and IT does!![]()
Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com
Andrew Manning said:I'm not sure who's showing what they do and do not know here: "Receding Sphere Theory" is a googlenope (Google can't find that phrase on the internet). Forgive me if I'm being naive, but if this were really a theory developed by Einstein, Google would most definitely know.
-Andrew
sixpack said:Are you sure there isn't a misunderstanding there? Much of Einstein's work dealt with billiards as a type of collision between very small particles. In one application, to microwaves, it turns out that there are a very finite number of paths that the waves concentrate on. Frequently billiard balls are referenced in discussions on this study as an example of something that WOULD NOT have a finite number of paths.
I'd love to see a link to this.
Cheers,
RC
p.s. As a further case for the misunderstanding, this paper was written in 1917.
I think the real key to this system was originally developed by Franz Mesmer and perfected by James Braid. Mesmer lived in Paris at the same time as Francois Minguad, the French army officer who invented the leather tip. Once you can hit the ball accurately -- with Mingaud's new leather "proce'de'" as the French called it -- the next logical step is to aim more accurately. So the system is almost as old as real pool.breakin8 said:The six were with no english to the center of the pocket. Or you could just shot throgh the english with seed no deflect.
mikepage said:In physics for the last hundred years people have referred to collisions between molecules using what's called a hard-sphere potential as "billiard ball collisions" because its easy for people to understand what you're saying.
Einstein would have used this terminology for his description of brownian motion most likely, because he considered hard-sphere collisions. But this is not really about billiard ball collisions.
Scott Lee said:If you have a repeatable stroke ANY aiming system will work for you. If you don't, NO aiming system will work.
Quote:
Me:
I'm guessing that Shawn means the target(s) on the back "wall" or facing of the pocket, not the one on the table surface. ...
Bob:
Yes, but I think the back of the pocket is the wrong target to choose. I think a lot of beginners miss shots because they are aiming at the back of the pocket from somewhere other than the full opening. This is particularly fatal for side pocket shots.
PKM said:OK, how about this. First is a 30 deg cut requiring a 50% overlap between ghost ball and object ball (note that ghost ball is just the position of the CB at contact). Second is a 36 deg cut, and the overlap is now 42 % instead of 50. Does your aiming system tell you that the aim points are the same for these shots? If so, are you trying to send the OB to the center of the pocket? Or do you claim that these numbers are inaccurate and the difference would affect the aiming?
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If possible, please find the authors, the title, the publication, the date and the page numbers (usually including the volume). Better would be a pointer to a PDF of the article. (It was probably not a "thesis" in the usual sense of that word.)Scott Lee said:Andrew...It is there. Einstein wrote a thesis on billiards called the Receding Sphere Theory (possible that it's not that exact name, but I'll find out). You just have to know where to look...and NO Bob, I am not kidding. ...
Bob Jewett said:If possible, please find the authors, the title, the publication, the date and the page numbers (usually including the volume). Better would be a pointer to a PDF of the article. (It was probably not a "thesis" in the usual sense of that word.)
My suspicion is that there is some confusion because as Mike Page mentioned, "billiard ball collisions" are used in many contexts in physics that have nothing at all whatsoever to do with spheres rolling on cloth. Like this:
The structure of the general, inhomogeneous solution of (bosonic) Einstein-matter systems in the vicinity of a cosmological singularity is considered. We review the proof (based on ideas of Belinskii-Khalatnikov-Lifshitz and technically simplified by the use of the Arnowitt-Deser-Misner Hamiltonian formalism) that the asymptotic behaviour, as one approaches the singularity, of the general solution is describable, at each (generic) spatial point, as a billiard motion in an auxiliary Lorentzian space. For certain Einstein-matter systems, notably for pure Einstein gravity in any spacetime dimension D and for the particular Einstein-matter systems arising in String theory, the billiard tables describing asymptotic cosmological behaviour are found to be identical to the Weyl chambers of some Lorentzian Kac-Moody algebras. In the case of the bosonic sector of supergravity in 11 dimensional spacetime the underlying Lorentzian algebra is that of the hyperbolic Kac-Moody group E(10), and there exists some evidence of a correspondence between the general solution of the Einstein-three-form system and a null geodesic in the infinite dimensional coset space E(10)/K (E(10)), where K (E(10)) is the maximal compact subgroup of E(10).
Scott Lee said:
Sorry, I can only hold three physics nerds in my head at one time, and I was already full up. You were beat out by Einstein, Lorentz, and Page. I have to approximate you by "Page" with a little english on the "Lorentz" side.sixpack said:Excellent except that it was me, not Mike Page that pointed it out. ...