| Slam Dunk Science - Science Insider
Reported November 2007
BACKGROUND: Good basketball players develop their skills through endless repetition, hard-wiring the brain with the correct sequence of muscle movements for optimal play (“kinesthetic memory”). However, knowing a little basic physics can still help you improve your game. You can learn why you should put a spin on the ball, get tips on improving your free throws, and discover the secret to Michael Jordan’s seemingly longer “hang time.”
PUTTING A SPIN ON IT: Once the basketball leaves the shooter’s hand, it travels in an unchanging parabolic path that can be calculated using Newton’s laws of motion. But putting a backspin on the ball can help you make more free throws. When a spinning ball bounces, it bounces back in the direction of the spin. If the ball hits the backboard or back of the rim, it will be directed toward into the basket. That’s because when the ball makes contact with the rim or backboard, the backspin causes a change in velocity opposite to the spin direction, making it more likely that the ball will drop into the net softly.
HANG TIME: Michael Jordan earned the nickname “Air Jordan” because of his seemingly longer “hang time” making jump shots in games, but this is an illusion. How high someone can jump depends on the force used to push on the floor when starting to jump, which in turn depends on the strength and power of the jumper’s leg muscles. The harder and more powerful the jump, the higher and longer the flight. In order to leap four feet into the air, the hang time would be 1.0 seconds. Jordan had a few tricks up his sleeve to make that hang time seem longer. When he dunked, he held onto the ball a bit longer than most players, and actually placed it in the basket on the way down. He also pulled his legs up as the jump progressed so it appeared that he was jumping higher. But it still all happened in less than one second.
The American Association of Physics Teachers contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.
If you would like more information, please contact:
John Fontanella, US Naval Academy
(410) 293-5507
fontanel@comcast.net
American Association of Physics Teachers,
College Park, MD
(301) 209-3311
http://www.aapt.org
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