File:Bouncing ball strobe edit.jpg
English: A bouncing ball captured with a stroboscopic flash at 25 images per second. Note that the ball becomes significantly non-spherical after each bounce, especially after the first. That, along with spin and air-resistance, causes the curve swept out to deviate slightly from the expected perfect parabola. Spin also causes the angle of first bounce to be shallower than expected. As a ball falls freely under the influence of gravity, it accelerates downward, its initial potential energy converting into kinetic energy. On impact with a hard surface the ball deforms, converting the kinetic energy into elastic potential energy. As the ball springs back, the energy converts back firstly to kinetic energy and then as the ball re-gains height into potential energy. Energy losses due to inelastic deformation and air resistance cause each successive bounce to be lower than the last. The image is of a child's ball about the size of a tennis ball.
SOURCE:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Bouncing_ball_strobe_edit.jpg
AUTHORS: Commons user MichaelMaggs Edit by Richard Bartz VERSION: 17:27, 8 October 2007 LICENSE: file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
- Creative Commons – Attribution required
- White cc-sa, a Creative Commons Share Alike icon: "You allow others to distribute derivative works only under a license identical to the license that governs your work."
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
| Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| current | 17:29, 22 July 2008 | 1,800 × 1,159 (293 KB) | Riccardo Guida (Talk | contribs) | English: A bouncing ball captured with a stroboscopic flash at 25 images per second. Note that the ball becomes significantly non-spherical after each bounce, especially after the first. That, along with spin and air-resistance, causes the curve swept out |
- Edit this file using an external application (See the setup instructions for more information)
File usage
There are no pages that link to this file.


