I'm not sure what you mean by "time markers." Each frame in HSV B.40 is about 0.0003 second (1/3000 of a second) apart.nickgeo said:Anyhow, permit me a couple of comments/observations/questions. In all of this I worked out that the points on the graphs are time markers equally spaced in time. There are 40 or 41 points and the total time is 1220 frames times 1/3000 (3000 frames per second). And the whizzing clock seemed to show around .4 seconds duration, even if backwards. So these time markers are about .01 seconds apart. I hope I got this much right.
We didn't calculate speed for every frame except during around tip contact, where the speed changes the fastest. That's why there are more points around tip contact.nickgeo said:On Mr. Jewett's graph:
1. There are 3 or 4 points just before the big drop that are very close in the distance direction. That suggests to me that the cue is moving more slowly that at the previous several points, that are farther apart. Yet the speed given on the speed axis is the same for all of these points. I don't understand how this can be. This is even more noticeable on the Dr.'s graph. Am I misunderstanding this?
I think we calculated the speed and distance at every frame around tip contact. So 6 frames at 1/3000 sec per frame would give 0.002 second, which is reasonable for a time period that includes tip contact.nickgeo said:2. The voice-over and vertical red rectangle indicate the points that represent the contact time and that speed decreases during that time. From the red rectangle and from the points where speed decreses, it's about 6 or 7 points, or .06 seconds. That's a lot more time that the one-thousandth of a second that you mentioned in an earlier e-mail. Or did I blow the math here or earlier on.
I have plenty of high-speed video clips showing what happens with the cue and tip. For video references, see:nickgeo said:3. How do we know that the cue is no longer in contact with the cueball after the cue speeds up again? Perhaps the contact has slowed down the cue, speeded up the cue ball, and now they are moving as one (like my original question about putting the tip against the cue ball, stroking and getting draw).
... because the cue ball moves away much faster than the original cue speed (see the videos mentioned above), and the cue slows during tip contact.nickgeo said:4. If instead the cue ball and the cue separate at the bottom of the vertical red rectangle as per the voiceover information, why doesn't the cue then hit the cue ball again?
The cue ball is long gone during the cue re-acceleration and deceleration (I have many HSV videos and physics analyses showing this also).nickgeo said:At the very moment of separation I would think that the cue ball is going a teeny tiny bit faster than the cue. But then the cue speeds up according to the graph and the cue ball should begin to slow down due to the cloth. The cue would win the race.
I think it is better to think of the contact speed as the key, because it defines how much momentum the cue has when it hits the ball. The separation speed is less because some of the cue momentum is transferred to the ball.nickgeo said:5. Is my assertion that the key speed is that at separation rather than at initial contact correct?
I'll take that bet any day. As the video shows, Bob reaches maximum speed at the bottom of the pendulum. It is an irrefutable fact that more cue speed creates more cue ball speed and/or spin.nickgeo said:6. Going back to the drawing board, I would love to see an experiment with Mr. Jewett's lovely pendulum stroke where he hits the draw shot on the early part of his stroke (accelerating) and then does it again on the decelerating ending part of his stroke, both at the same speed. My bet is on the early Mr. Jewett to get the big draw.
Regards,
Dave