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  2. Magnus effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnus_effect

    The most readily observable case of the Magnus effect is when a spinning sphere (or cylinder) curves away from the arc it would follow if it were not spinning. It is often used by football and volleyball players, baseball pitchers, and cricket bowlers. Consequently, the phenomenon is important in the study of the physics of many ball sports.

  3. Shuuto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuuto

    In the third edition of The Dickson Baseball Dictionary, "shoot" is explained as: . Shoot 【noun / obsolete】 A kind of thoroughly changing pitching.It was a term used from the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century and it was called as a curve or a variant thereof because the sphere moved "in a certain direction" ("roughly").

  4. Opisometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opisometer

    The wheel is placed in contact with the curved line to be measured and run along its length. By counting the number of teeth passing a mark on the handle while this is done, the length of the line can be ascertained: line length = wheel circumference × teeth counted/teeth on wheel.

  5. Stroboscopic effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stroboscopic_effect

    It accounts for the "wagon-wheel effect", so-called because in video, spoked wheels (such as on horse-drawn wagons) sometimes appear to be turning backwards. A strobe fountain, a stream of water droplets falling at regular intervals lit with a strobe light , is an example of the stroboscopic effect being applied to a cyclic motion that is not ...

  6. Variations of baseball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variations_of_baseball

    Blitzball is played with a ball similar to a wiffle ball, which curves more when pitched and travels further when hit than a regular baseball. [38] There are only 2 to 3 players on each team, [39] and games last 3 innings. [40] It was started around 2010. [41]

  7. Slip (vehicle dynamics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slip_(vehicle_dynamics)

    In (automotive) vehicle dynamics, slip is the relative motion between a tire and the road surface it is moving on. This slip can be generated either by the tire's rotational speed being greater or less than the free-rolling speed (usually described as percent slip), or by the tire's plane of rotation being at an angle to its direction of motion (referred to as slip angle).

  8. Hunting oscillation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunting_oscillation

    The wheels of the power car, however, can be affected by hunting oscillation, because the wheels of the power car are fixed to the axles in pairs like in conventional bogies. Less conical wheels and bogies equipped with independent wheels that turn independently from each other and are not fixed to an axle in pairs are cheaper than a suitable ...

  9. Cycloid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycloid

    All these curves are roulettes with a circle rolled along another curve of uniform curvature. The cycloid, epicycloids, and hypocycloids have the property that each is similar to its evolute . If q is the product of that curvature with the circle's radius, signed positive for epi- and negative for hypo-, then the similitude ratio of curve to ...