Patrick Johnson said:
[...]
Alternatively, can you say whether you've concluded anything about acceleration's vs. velocity's importance to hitting the cue ball at the right speed?
pj
chgo
Think about a person walking.
On every step, the person places his foot RIGHT below his center of mass. Now ask the person to walk faster. The center of mass (person) moves faster, the legs swing faster and/or longer, and still those feet get planted right below the person's center of mass on each step. Ask the person to start trotting. Same thing. This is something we're really good at.
What would happen if the person started trotting and the leg didn't swing around quite fast enough, or didn't swing out quite far enough? The person would plant a foot BEHIND his center of mass and fall forward.
My point is we are remarkably good at COUPLING the speed we are moving to the way in which we swing our legs to achieve the desired result --planting a foot below our center of mass.
It's not to the same degree, but I think we are remarkably good at coupling the length of our stroke to the peak force to achieve a desired stick speed. That is, if a one-pocket player is hitting an object ball three rails to the vicinity of his pocket, he can do it with a short stroke or a medium stroke or a long stroke. If he shortens the length of his backstroke by half an inch, he is good at generating the right amount of extra force on the forward stroke to get the desired outcome.
So if the force versus time curve for his stroke looks like the hump of a sine curve
F(t) = A sin(wt)
then I'm saying players are remarkably good at coupling together w and A to achieve the desired speed of the stroke. w can vary over a pretty wide range and the player will naturally also change A over a wide range to compensate.
This makes consideration of how the quality of the outcome varies with respect to w holding A fixed (like Jal does) or considering how the quality of the outcome varies with respect to A holding w fixed [which nobody's talked about yet and favors decelerating at impact ;-)] just not very well related to the nature of our actual errors.
Think about the hot and cold water controls in a shower--two degrees of freedom, two variables. But like A and w, H and C are two degrees of freedom that are strongly coupled together. What we care about is the temperature of the water. If we increase the intensity of H and of C together, we can keep the temperature of the water the same. This suggests a coordinate transformation to more natural variables (ones that aren't so coupled)
The new coordinates are I (intensity) and T (temperature), and they're obtained from the old ones by
I = H + C
T = H - C
and these are the better controls in a shower (pull it out further to get more water and twist it to change the temperature)